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Glory Be by Augusta Scattergood
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Glory Be (edition 2012)

by Augusta Scattergood

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1048105,546 (3.4)None
Member:msdecker
Title:Glory Be
Authors:Augusta Scattergood
Info:Scholastic Press (2012), Hardcover, 208 pages
Collections:Your library
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Glory Be by Augusta Scattergood

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This debut novel offers a nicely told story with an appealing protagonist but I can't help feeling like I've read all this before. ( )
  Sullywriter | Apr 3, 2013 |
This is a great historical fiction story. It takes place in the south during the start of the civil rights movement. ( )
  dmiller70 | Mar 13, 2013 |
Reading Glory Be was like climbing into a time machine and landing in early 1960. Scattergood did an excellent job of setting up the conflict and it's effects on the characters who were complicatedly real. The thick smell of humidity and chlorine and the sound of life guard whistles were vividly evoked. I especially appreciated how the author portrayed the complicated issues. See complete review at www.soimfifty.blogspot.com ( )
  ptorres | Jan 29, 2013 |
RGG: Told from the point of view a twelve-year-old white girl, who befriends the daughter of a freedom fighter, about the closing of her town pool to avoid it being integrated. The story seems a bit white centric. For example, while the family's black maid is like a mother to her, there's very little understanding about the affect of segregation on African Americans. Reading Level: 10-12.
  rgruberexcel | Oct 10, 2012 |
Glory's biggest concern in that hot and humid summer of 1964 should have been planning her 12th birthday party, held every year at the Hanging Moss Community Pool, but more than just the weather is heating up in Hanging Moss. "Freedom Workers" have come to town. They're opening up a health clinic, befriending the town's Negroes, encouraging them to advance the work of the civil rights movement in the South.

Quite unwittingly, Glory has made friends with Laura, a "freedom worker's" daughter - a Yankee, about as welcome in Hanging Moss as a mosquito at a picnic. This causes no problem in Glory's house. Reverend Hemphill of the First Fellowship United Church bears no ill will toward the Northerners, nor does Glory's sister, Jesslyn, or their housekeeper; in fact, they're sympathetic to the cause - but others are not so understanding. The very fabric of the town begins to fray as the Town Council and the newspaper go up against the Hemphill family and Miss Bloom, the librarian. Neighbors take sides in a battle that is waged not in the streets, but in the newspaper, in the signage at the Community Pool, and in that most communal and equalizing of locations, the Public Library.

Glory Be encapsulates the Civil Rights movement of the 1960s into one small town's fight to maintain its segregated community swimming pool,

"I don't think the Pool Committee's worried about your birthday" was all Jesslyn said.
Here I was, sure that one little part of this town had changed. That maybe people like Frankie's daddy finally got together to decide opening the pool up for everybody, just in time for a Fourth of July celebration, was the kind of thing you should do on our country's birthday. But I was wrong. My thinking was all mixed up.
"A lot of things are different this summer, Glory," Jesslyn said, the corners of her mouth turned down like maybe she wished it was last summer. "Including your friend."
...
When I peered through those hard metal fence links at the bluest, cleanest water, I was so mad I wanted to spit. I vowed never to speak to that hateful Frankfurter Smith if I lived to be a hundred."

Glory Be is a timely reminder that change does not come easily, that having truth or righteousness on your side does not make things easier, that it is easier to do what comes easily than what is right.

Sometimes, a girl, a family, a town, even a whole generation must sacrifice to make a better future. Readers will enjoy Glory's down-to-earth qualities. She's not a larger-than-life hero, she's a diminutive slice of life itself.

Librarians will appreciate the prominent role that author and former librarian, Augusta Scattergood, gives to the public library.

http://shelf-employed.blogspot.com/2012/07/glory-be-review.html ( )
  shelf-employed | Jul 11, 2012 |
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Amazon.com Product Description (ISBN 0545331803, Hardcover)

A Mississippi town in 1964 gets riled when tempers flare at the segregated public pool.

As much as Gloriana June Hemphill, or Glory as everyone knows her, wants to turn twelve, there are times when Glory wishes she could turn back the clock a year. Jesslyn, her sister and former confidante, no longer has the time of day for her now that she’ll be entering high school. Then there’s her best friend, Frankie. Things have always been so easy with Frankie, and now suddenly they aren’t. Maybe it’s the new girl from the North that’s got everyone out of sorts. Or maybe it’s the debate about whether or not the town should keep the segregated public pool open.

Augusta Scattergood has drawn on real-life events to create a memorable novel about family, friendship, and choices that aren’t always easy.

(retrieved from Amazon Wed, 09 Jan 2013 05:06:55 -0500)

In the summer of 1964 as she is about to turn twelve, Glory's town of Hanging Moss, Mississippi, is beset by racial tension when town leaders close her beloved public pool rather than desegregating it.

(summary from another edition)

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