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.