No one can doubt that the last few years—COVID years—presented an especially traumatic time for our students. While children were not becoming sick from the coronavirus in the same numbers as adults, the impact—present and future—of the pandemic on our students cannot be measured. Children have been worrying about sick and vulnerable relatives and friends and suffering grief over the death of loved ones. For a long time, they were isolated from friends, relatives, and their communities and were learning through long-distance without a teacher’s supportive presence—a hand on the shoulder, a smile, some personal words—to encourage them.
GARVEY IN THE DARK, Nikki Grimes’ sequel, or more accurately, companion novel to GARVEY’S CHOICE, shares the first six months of the pandemic in the lives of Garvey and his family and friends in southern California where the first case was diagnosed on January 25, 2020.
Readers will identify with Garvey and feel comforted that they were not alone in their experiences. They will empathize with him when his father contracts COVID and applaud when he uses his musical talent, discovered in GARVEY’S CHOICE, to give hope to hospital patients, as he did with his COVID-stricken father.
Like his teacher-mother, Garvey worries about the children on the school lunch programs, he commiserates with his sister who is missing her sports (not really Garvey’s thing), he comforts his best friend whose grandmother is in the hospital, and he waits for “normal” to return.
I rip off my mask—
two months into lockdown—and
glare at Mom, thinking
“Remember how you said we’d
Get back to normal? When? WHEN?” (75, ARC)
In the midst of this time period, George Floyd is killed, and Garvey knows, “Our black skin makes us all kin.” (132, ARC) And then Breonna Taylor “and way too many others.” (142, ARC) Because of their family quarantine, Garvey and his sister can’t join the protests and marches for justice, but his mother points out that there will be other protests. “sadly, injustice isn’t going anywhere.” (143, ARC) and his father says,
Son. Marching’s not the
only way to let folks know
our lives matter, too.
We can show the world that each
day in how we live, what we
say; the dignity
we carry ourselves with, and
the respect we show
one another.
Then, when there
are protests again, we’ll go. (163-4, ARC)
GARVEY IN THE DARK, again told through tanka poetry, recounts Garvey’s story which is all our stories, and lets our readers know they were, and are, not alone.