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Sounder

Sour Land

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Life is hard for the three Stone children. The death of their mother has left them bereft and grieving. Their father tries hard to make things better, but he is busy trying to keep their farm going. Even the land around them seems to have betrayed It is so barren that it is known as sour land. Then Moses Waters comes to teach at the black school at Cedar Corners. Moses can hear things no one else can, like the sound of the grass and the earth humming together. More than anyone else, he seems to have a special understanding of the Stone family. Only Moses can help them out of their grief. But a sour land grows sour people. There are some folks in town who don't approve of the friendship between the white Stone family and the new black teacher. And it looks like they will go to dangerous lengths to stop it.

128 pages, Paperback

First published April 1, 1971

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About the author

William H. Armstrong

47 books69 followers
William H. Armstrong (1911 - 1999) was an American children's author and educator, best known for his 1969 Newbery Medal-winning novel, Sounder.

In 1956, at the request of his school headmaster, he published his first book, a study guide called Study Is Hard Work. Armstrong followed this title with numerous other self-help books, and in 1963 he was awarded the National School Bell Award of the National Association of School Administrators for distinguished service in the interpretation of education.

In 1969, Armstrong published his masterpiece, an eight-chapter novel titled Sounder about an African-American sharecropping family. Praised by critics, Sounder won the John Newbery Medal and the Lewis Carroll Shelf Award in 1970, and was adapted into a major motion picture in 1972.

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5 stars
26 (26%)
4 stars
36 (37%)
3 stars
24 (24%)
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5 (5%)
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6 (6%)
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews
Profile Image for Katja Labonté.
Author 30 books349 followers
July 3, 2024
5+ stars (8/10 hearts). My heart. I’m not even sure how to review this book. I was sure it could’t beat Sounder even if it’s not an official sequel. But as soon as I started it I fell in love… and when I reread, I’d forgotten how good it was and was blown away again.

Moses, you all… just, Moses. What a sweet, wise, Godly old man. I want to be a Moses. <33 I can’t express what a wonderful character he was, and how deeply he influences and touches me every time I read this book. I love Anson, so kind and understanding, and Enoch is amazing. The children are all so sweet and real, too.

The writing style was really beautiful, understated and slow and gentle, unlike Sounder yet slightly similar. I love the unspoken themes of love and understanding for man and nature—the reminder that everyone is so unique and worthwhile and beautiful.

And the ending… oh, it’s terrible and beautiful all at once. I cannot really believe it and rereading it, I hope with all my heart it will just be different this time… work out… be perfect… Yet it is needed, and it is true, and it is powerful.

In short, this is a heartbreakingly beautiful in its own right, and a wonderful, unofficial sequel to Sounder. <3

A Favourite Quote: “‘I guess children have to stub their toes, fall out of trees they have climbed, and see these sad things, to be trained for living in the world,’ Moses Welters said[.]
“Anson … said, ‘We’d like to keep children from these things, but you’re right. They have to learn.’”
954 reviews27 followers
October 9, 2013
Moses Waters grew into a gentle man with a keen insight into life. He has a reverence for books and learning. Ansom Stone, a farmer, hires Moses to work on his farm. Ansom's children, David, Jonathan, and Ruth fall in love with Moses who shares with them stories and a love of nature. When school starts in the fall, Moses starts teaching at the Negro school in Cedar Corners. He stays on with the Stones to help with chores and the children's lessons in the evenings. Moses and the Stones enjoy a wonderful friendship for many years. One night Moses witnesses the murder of a black girl. When he goes to the Commonwealth attorney to press charges against the Lawhorn brothers, the Lawhorn clan’s violence is directed toward Moses. Despite its never gaining any literary prominence, Sour Land is a well-written book that tells how the boy in Sounder grew up to be a compassionate and gentle man who still had to live in an unjust world where he was judged by his skin color.



45 reviews1 follower
January 22, 2016
This book is not a sequel to Sounder, but does make one reference to Sounder in the middle of the book. Because of the introduction to Sounder by the author, and because of the ending of this book, I think it is based on the author's real life. And like real life, there isn't always a happy ending. This would be a good book for reader's who like books by Mildred Taylor, such as Roll of Thunder Hear My Cry.
Profile Image for Mimi.
70 reviews3 followers
October 3, 2017
There is no indication that this is sequel to William H. Armstrong's Newbery award winning novel Sounder until about midway through. Moses is asked if he ever had a dog and he answers that he did, once and the dog's name was Sounder. That book is the reason I can never read animal books, so I immediately braced for something similar to happen in this one. Like so many stories written about post-slavery relations, the stereotype of the sage older black man teaching rural white kids history lessons is a bit overdone but written so well that one must be reminded that all stereotypes begin somewhere, before they become tired they're fresh. I really enjoyed the book overall and think it should be considered as a companion to Sounder.
Profile Image for slauderdale.
162 reviews3 followers
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March 11, 2024
That ended about as well as can be expected. [heavy irony] I was sort of bummed about the reveal re: the identity of the Moses Waters - I actually thought he was going to correlate to a different character from "Sounder," whose identity he seems to have subsumed. An eloquent book, but perhaps too mired in spoken dialogue by the characters, even though it still has the heavily interior quality of "Sounder."
[cribbed from my reading log]

Jotting down this quote for myself:
"Children understand more than we do sometimes. They're willing to pay the price for love. When there's none to buy, that's when it's sad." (p. 77)
Profile Image for Ann.
165 reviews
December 31, 2023
Oh my! This book and Sounder should be assigned middle school reading. They are different aproaches to the same problem.

As I read, I kept waiting for the other shoe to drop. I wasn't ready.

Moses' name was not random. He led people: young and old, black and white. He had such self-control. Some people feared from their own ignorance.

These books are good segues for group book discussion. Our local libraries do not have Sourland, so I will donate my copy.
168 reviews
June 18, 2019
Great book to read after you read the classic "Sounder." it paints a loving, but realistic picture of life in pre-Civil Rights America. I like the way Armstrong shows friendships that were formed in spite of prejudice surrounding good people, and the example of a father teaching his children good things despite being surrounded by hatred and bigotry.
Profile Image for Mickey Bits.
854 reviews4 followers
April 12, 2023
Interesting "sequel" to Sounder. Perhaps it was the point, but I would have liked to know more about the protagonist of Sounder during his adult life.
Profile Image for Sherry.
76 reviews
May 18, 2023
In the description of this book on the front flap, it makes note of a "shocking ending" but sadly, and disturbingly it was not a surprise because everyone knows what usually happens when a story is about racism. It continues to be upsetting when we recognize that the story, written in 1971, can very easily be a story written in 2021 because not much has changed in society.

As noted in some other reviews, this story is written for a middle-years audience so the details of racist acts are blurry but children will still clearly see the blatant racial inequality presented in the story. It was so beautiful how it started out, a white family befriending a new black neighbor (Moses Waters), accepting him into their family with love and respect and enduring all the negativity from community members - standing up for their friend at every turn. I fell in love with all these wonderful characters and felt hopeful, very briefly, that things would not turn out as expected.

Armstrong's writing is poetic and a joy to read yet this story seemed to need a bit more to bring it all together in the end.
118 reviews4 followers
Read
May 10, 2009
Life is hard for the three Stone children. The death of their mother has left them bereft and grieving. Their father tries hard to make things better, but he is busy trying to keep their farm going. Even the land around them seems to have betrayed them: It is so barren that it is known as sour land.Then Moses Waters comes to teach at the black school at Cedar Corners. Moses can hear things no one else can, like the sound of the grass and the earth humming together. More than anyone else, he seems to have a special understanding of the Stone family. Only Moses can help them out of their grief.But a sour land grows sour people. There are some folks in town who don't approve of the friendship between the white Stone family and the new black teacher. And it looks like they will go to dangerous lengths to stop it.
Profile Image for Cassandra Ball.
42 reviews1 follower
December 17, 2010
This book was about a white family who befriends a black man and take him in as a member of their family pretty much. Because of this the children go through a couple trials at school and the father has to deal with several issues including in the end the black man being shoot and then framed as a drunk. I really loved this book. Even though it did deal with a very controversial issue, I thought that the book presented in such a beautiful way.
960 reviews2 followers
May 22, 2016
A sequel to the book Sounder that won a Newberry award in the 70's. It contains the same stark look at conditions for black people in the south, but this time told mostly through the story of an accepting white family and how the old man improves their lives. The story is warmer than the first one, but still portrays the inequity of the times, particularly with the ending.
1,151 reviews6 followers
July 24, 2016
It seems that the injustices of ignorant, mean people prevail in a cursed world, but the main character in this story rises above the pettiness and brutality of wicked people to teach us love instead of hate, peace instead of fear and order instead of chaos.
Profile Image for Sharon.
67 reviews7 followers
March 24, 2013
Lovely prose. Ignorance makes me sad.
1,439 reviews15 followers
July 3, 2014
Lyrical writing but way ham-handed with the moral lesson. Saw how that one was going to end by the conclusion of the first chapter.
174 reviews17 followers
December 17, 2016
The book started a little slow, although it picked up and turned into an excellent story. I recommend this book for everyone ages 11+.
Profile Image for Nova.
564 reviews5 followers
May 6, 2013
Very good story; set in the Southern States when racism was still rife.
Displaying 1 - 18 of 18 reviews

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