This is very much a fish out of water sort of story. Cecil has been living in Florida, but his family relocates to Boston, where, of course, he doesn’t know anyone, and all the black kids segregate themselves. His sister warns him not to be an Oreo, but he finds that the only people he is hanging with are white.
Then there is his father, who wants him to be an architect, and what he really wants to do is draw cartoons. He loves to draw comic books, and caricatures, and all things that have to do with telling a story.
And he keeps wanting to talk to the other black kids, but doens’t know how to approach them.
The author based some of what happened in this story on his own experience of moving to Boston, and noticing that all the Black kids kept to themselves, something that was totally different from what he was used to. And he said, of course, he too wrote comic books, like Cecil did.
You have great sympathy for Cecil. Who hasn’t been in a new place and had to make friends. What makes Cecil finally reach out to the other black kids was when two of his “friends” do things to hurt him. One, pats him on the head as though he were a dog, and the other steals his cartoons, and presents them as their own.
Good story. Very relatable. It is hard to stand up for yourself, but you feel better when you do.
Thanks to the publisher for making this book available for an honest review. This book will be published on the 2nd of April 2024.