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(2)
YA
These reissues of Graham's novels about an African-American family confronting implacable racism bring the struggle for civil rights vividly to life. In South, David Williams and his family make the decision to move out of the segregated South; North details the whole new set of problems that emerges after they move; Whose and Return continue the story of David's education and return to the South to set up his medical practice. [Review covers these titles: North Town, Return to South Town, South Town, and Whose Town?.]
(2)
YA
These reissues of Graham's novels about an African-American family confronting implacable racism bring the struggle for civil rights vividly to life. In South, David Williams and his family make the decision to move out of the segregated South; North details the whole new set of problems that emerges after they move; Whose and Return continue the story of David's education and return to the South to set up his medical practice. [Review covers these titles: North Town, Return to South Town, South Town, and Whose Town?.]
(2)
YA
These reissues of Graham's novels about an African-American family confronting implacable racism bring the struggle for civil rights vividly to life. In South, David Williams and his family make the decision to move out of the segregated South; North details the whole new set of problems that emerges after they move; Whose and Return continue the story of David's education and return to the South to set up his medical practice. [Review covers these titles: North Town, Return to South Town, South Town, and Whose Town?.]
Reviewer: Terri Schmitz
| Horn Book Magazine Issue:
August, 1969
(2)
YA
These reissues of Graham's novels about an African-American family confronting implacable racism bring the struggle for civil rights vividly to life. In South, David Williams and his family make the decision to move out of the segregated South; North details the whole new set of problems that emerges after they move; Whose and Return continue the story of David's education and return to the South to set up his medical practice. [Review covers these titles: North Town, Return to South Town, South Town, and Whose Town?.]
(2)
K-3
Illustrated by
Ashley Bryan.
While serving as a missionary in Liberia during the twenties, Lorenz Graham was intrigued by hearing Bible stories told in West African idiom, and he collected many of the stories, publishing them here in 1946. Ashley Bryan's magnificent black-and-white woodblock illustrations lend an added power and dignity to the text of this most unusual and captivating book.