THIS SHOULD BE REQUIRED READING IN MIDDLE SCHOOLS! I can only pray that the conversations it invokes will truly lead to a brighter future.
I am not sure if I have EVER felt LUCKY to have come across a book, but JACKSON by Cindy Marabito is just such a book. Beautifully read by Jessica Carter, it tells the story of a short time that was instrumental to history through the eyes of fifteen year old Jody Luther. When Jody, her mother and her ten year old sister Willie flee to Jackson, Mississippi in 1969 the country is teetering on the edge, an eruption is imminent and the epicenter for Jody and her family is JACKSON.
Jody and Willie have always had to depend on each other, never knowing when their mother who has mental health and substance abuse problems will be there for them. But in one short year the fault line between the two of them will widen more than ever before.
Touching on issues of race, class, substance abuse, sexual assault, American history and coming of age, I’m not sure how I would even classify this book. YA? Historical Fiction? Coming of age? Social/cultural? Yes, yes, yes and yes.
I had EVERY emotion as I listened to this; anxiety, confusion, fear, anger, and as they drove down that dusty road at the end I was cheering. While I was younger than Willie during that time, things happened that I STILL wasn’t aware of, ie, Jackson State Massacre just ten days after Kent State’s. I’m 60 years old and this is the first I ever heard of it!
The ONLY trouble I had was that the narrator speaks VERY fast. I’m a Yankee. We speak quite fast and even I had trouble keeping up at times. But otherwise the narrative was wonderful.
I cannot recommend this book enough! Settle in. Travel back to the summer of peace and love.