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Bombingham

by Anthony Grooms

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1003273,107 (3.73)1
Bombingham by Anthony Grooms is the powerful story of a middle-class black family living in a time of great unrest. Accepting the charge of writing a letter to the parents of a fallen friend and fellow soldier, Walter Burke begins to reflect on the effects that segregation has had on his family and the effect the Vietnam war is having on him. Narrator Dion Graham provides an exceptional reading of Grooms' unsentimental prose.… (more)
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Reviewed by Mr. Overeem (Language Arts)
As Walter Burke, a black U. S. soldier, moves in with his platoon on a North Vietnamese village, a sudden moment of violence sends him reeling back to his youth in Birmingham, Alabama--the "Bombingham" of the title. The year is 1964, Dr. King has come to town, and Walter's family finds itself fraught with division. A novel about responsibility and denial, gifts and losses, desolation and hope, humiliation and pride, love and death--and a call to remember. ( )
  HHS-Staff | Nov 18, 2009 |
An excellent fictional depiction of race relations in 1960's Birmingham "Bombingham" Alabama. Grooms does a fantastic job of creating an empathetic child character whose innocence and curiosity fuel the sadness of the days when a child felt as if he or she had to fight for God-given freedom, or fight "in the place of" parents who could not afford to lose their jobs by marching themselves. He gives a well-rounded view of the different levels of "involvement" during that time in American history and the different levels of apprehension and caution not found in history books. (Oftentimes, history books show that ALL blacks were fighting for the cause, or only a select few of "movers and shakers" were leading a small group. This book actually shows a couple of rational characters, those who felt trapped by the loss of hope they were feeling, but who knew that their jobs kept food on the tables and that marching was an unaffordable luxury.) The story also entails a good deal of factual history, and the reader watches as the protagonist, Walter Burke, actually witnesses Dr. Martin Luther King's preaching in the flesh, something extraordinary and awe-inspiring in itself. (Readers know that little Walter has no idea how much of an impact Dr. King would have on the history of America in the future.) The direct link to Walter being in war in Bombingham and in war in Thoybu was thought-provoking and well-written. My only criticism is the lack of effect readers see in Walter after Lamar is shot in the head in front of him by white boys around his same age. We didn't receive the event in a scene, but rather as an epilogue way at the end, and I would have liked to have witnessed more of Walter's reactions and seen that young child's funeral compared to Walter's mother's, since Lamar was in the story as much as Walter's mother was. I'm unsure as to how young Lamar's death was a symbol of the overall struggle, other than the fact that his mother and soon-to-be-stepfather were strong activists, and that his death represented their continuous strive for freedom. The story ends on a note of hope, however, as Walter dreams about he and Lamar's aspirations to become the first "Negro" astronauts while writing the lovely note to Haywood's parents. This rounds out the theme of hope embedded in the impossibility of hellish ordeals during that time and how that glimmer of hope could make or break an entire life. ( )
  MissMea | Dec 27, 2008 |
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To the children of "Bombingham," wherever that might be.
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Bombingham by Anthony Grooms is the powerful story of a middle-class black family living in a time of great unrest. Accepting the charge of writing a letter to the parents of a fallen friend and fellow soldier, Walter Burke begins to reflect on the effects that segregation has had on his family and the effect the Vietnam war is having on him. Narrator Dion Graham provides an exceptional reading of Grooms' unsentimental prose.

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