Sukey and the Mermaid

by Robert D. San Souci

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Unhappy with her life at home, Sukey receives kindness and wealth from Mama Jo the mermaid.

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7 reviews
As always, the illustrations of Pinkney are detailed and Caldecott winning deservable.

Cultivated from a number of sources such as West Africa. Caribbean folklore, it is noted that the term "Water Mother" is another name for Mermaid. I've read many of books containing the beautiful, creative works of Pinkney, most of which contain African American history.

In this story, a young girl named Sukey is misused by her mother's husband called "Mister Jones." Mister Jones beats Sukey's mother and makes Sukey perform all inside and outside tasks. Hoeing the land, pulling weeds from the property property. Mr. Jones is not shy in threatening Sukey to work faster lest she is whipped with the stick.

One day Sukey grows weary, throwing down the hoe, show more she ran until she found the beach. Somewhere she heard of, and memorized the song

Thee, thee, down below,
Come to me, Mama Jo!!"

When a very beautiful dark-skinning mermaid appears from the Ocean, Sukey befriends her and is taken on a trip down, down, down to the ocean where she sees marvelous trinkets and gold coins from a long ago pirate ship. Sukey, receives a gold coin rom Mama Jo. Taking it home only leads to greed and threats from Mister Jones that she must go back and demand more. The step father and Sukey's mother take a boat out by the shore and call Mama Jo. When she appears, they try to capture her with a net. As a result, Mama Jo does not listen to Sukey's repeated calls.

One night in a dream, Mama Jo appears to Sukey promising to take her down to live with her beneath the sea. Missing Mama Jo, and weary of all the whippings and hard labor, she allows Mama Jo to hold on to her and to travel the deep places in the sea. Soon Sukey misses the sun, the feel of soil, and sounds of voices.

Granting her wish, Sukey is told by the mermaid that she will be sought by many, but only should answer the the love of Dembo. Afraid Dembo will get all the coins, Mr. Jones steals them, and in addition he kills him.

Mama Jo agrees to bring Dembo back from death. Hereater, Sukey finds happiness. Sukey never again sees the mermaid, except for the sight of green scales, and the sound of laughter far out to the sea,
show less
This is a well-fleshed out fairy tale, with Cinderella elements. Beautiful language and pictures. Bit wordy, though - save it for kids with a good attention span.
Sukey has a step-pa and he is very mean to her. He makes her work all day and gets mad if she even stops to take a break. There is one place that she can go to get away...the ocean. She can call up Mama Jo who is a beautiful mermaid. Mama Jo offers to take her away to a beautiful place under the sea. The only bad thing is...there are no people there. Sukey must make a decision whether to go there and get away from her step-pa or figure out how to make life with people a better place to be.

The illustrations are absolutely gorgeous. Pinkney does a brilliant job using a scratch board technique that is very unique.

The folk tale is based on a compilation of similar stories told from West Africa to the Carribean islands.
½
Sukey befriends a mermaid when she sings an old song she knew, summoning Mama Jo, thus begins the tale of redemption for Sukey. An enjoyable African American folktale with beautiful scratchboard drawings.
This is the amazing story of Sukey the mermaid, drawn from various African Americanstories, who befriends Mama Jo a mermaid in the sea because her father is a mean and evil man. Sukey finds a friend and mentor in Mama Jo and learns about goodness and love overcoming all things.
Unhappy with her life at home, Sukey receives kindness and wealth from Mama Jo the mermaid

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79+ Works 12,244 Members
Robert D. San Souci was born on October 10, 1946 in San Francisco, California. He attended college at St. Mary's College in Moraga. After holding jobs in book stores and in publishing, he became a full-time author in 1974. He was best known for his adaptations of folklore for children. During his lifetime, he wrote more than 100 books for young show more readers including Song of Sedna, Kate Shelley: Bound for Legend, The Talking Eggs, Two Bear Cubs, Cendrillon: A Caribbean Cinderella, Brave Margaret: An Irish Tale, Robin Hood and the Golden Arrow, and Cinderella Skeleton. He wrote 12 books which were illustrated by his younger brother Daniel San Souci including The Legend of Scarface, Sister Tricksters: Rollicking Tales of Clever Females, and As Luck Would Have It: From The Brothers Grimm. He also wrote nonfiction works for children, several novels for adults, and the film story for Disney's Mulan. The Legend of Scarface won the Notable Children's Trade Book in the Social Studies, National Council for the Social Studies, and was a Horn Book honor list citation. Sukey and the Mermaid won the American Library Association's Notable Book citation in 1992 and Cut from the Same Cloth won an Aesop Award from the Children's Folklore Section of the American Folklore Society. He died on December 19, 2014 at the age of 68. (Bowker Author Biography) show less

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Pinkney, Brian (Illustrator)

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Canonical title
Sukey and the Mermaid

Classifications

Genres
Children's Books, Picture Books
DDC/MDS
398.21Society, Government, and CultureCustoms, etiquette & folkloreFolklore & FolktalesFolk literatureFairy Tales
LCC
PZ8.1 .S227 .SLanguage and LiteratureFiction and juvenile belles lettresFiction and juvenile belles lettresJuvenile belles lettres
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Members
273
Popularity
117,795
Reviews
6
Rating
(4.07)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
12
ASINs
3