Tuesday, May 5, 2026

Sundown Girls (juvenile fiction)

"When the sun goes down in a sundown town 
     Be wise and beware. 
When the sun goes down in a sundown town 
     Make sure you are scarce. 
When the sun goes down in a sundown town
     Only the foolhardy stay there."
     This menacing poem, quoted at the beginning of L. S. Stratton's Sundown Girls, lets readers (and parents and teachers of readers) know that the book, although fiction, is rooted in dark history, rattling the bones of the inconvenient skeletons in America's closet.
     I was well into adulthood when I first learned about sundown towns. In the not so distant past they were legion, and not just in the South--unless you consider Illinois and Oregon to be below the Mason Dixon Line. Stratton based the history of the fictional Sparksburg, Virginia on real life examples. 
     After the Civil War the whites in many integrated towns began to strongly resent the new found prosperity of some of the Black residents. They drove the Blacks out by threatening them, burning their homes and businesses, and even resorting to murder. The Wilmington (North Carolina) Massacre of 1898 and the Tulsa (Oklahoma) Massacre of 1921 are particularly egregious examples. Often the town leaders and police forces turned a blind eye to, encouraged, or participated in the lawlessness rather than trying to subdue it.
     Not all those towns became sundown towns. The ones that did enacted legislation that specifically forbid Blacks from being in the town after sundown. That way the whites could exploit them as domestic and agricultural laborers without accepting them as neighbors. If unlucky Blacks were caught at night whites could dispose of them by any means they chose. Many Blacks disappeared, never to be seen again. 
     "'Sorry,' Dawn said with a small smile, 'didn't mean to startle you, honey, but you didn't hear me when I was calling you.'
     No, you weren't calling me, Naomi thought, because that's not my name."
     When Naomi was fifteen she was torn from her mother (who was taken away by the police) and returned to the family she'd been kidnapped from as a baby: Dawn (mother), Andre (father), and Maya and Blake (siblings). So she's living with strangers who share a long, intimate history. Dawn and Andre panic any time they can't find Camryn (her birth name), fearful of losing her again. Maya seems to wish she'd never returned. 
     To restore harmony the family is taking a three week vacation at an isolated cabin in the Shenandoah Valley with a relentless list of planned activities. But it's not going to be the bonding panacea the parents anticipate. Naomi has misgivings about the place. On the way to the cabin a black truck follows the family and almost runs them off the road. At the cabin she starts smelling a sickening stench like rotting flesh that the rest of the family is oblivious to. And there's the silent little nightgown wearing girl who appears only to her, seeming to want something of her. 
     Naomi makes friends with Elly, a girl her age who is vacationing with her two moms at a nearby cabin. She's seen a stranger lurking in the woods near the cabins at night. When Elly's moms die suddenly in a car accident Elly is nowhere to be found. 
     When her family had first driven into town Naomi had seen a missing poster for a teen named Amber. Thinking maybe both girls had been kidnapped by the same person and are still alive, she starts her own investigation. Local law enforcement warns her that there will be consequences if she doesn't cease, desist, and leave the detective work to the professionals. Dawn and Andre do everything in their power to stop her. She knows she's putting herself in real danger...
     ...but if there's any chance of finding Elly before it's too late she'll do whatever it takes. 
     Books like Sundown Girls are so necessary now. Book banners and curriculum white washers are trying so hard to remove  evidence that could tarnish beliefs in American and white supremecy. We are so in danger of returning to the educational ignorance of my childhood. We can't let that happen. 
On a purrrsonal note, my day had a purrrfect start. When I woke up Tobago was contentedly snuggling with me. When I was doing my half hour on my exercise bike my prisms caught the light and I was surrounded by dancing 🌈s. Tobago snuggled on the sofa with me while I read my email newsletters. And I read that Kimberly Crenshaw (who came up with the theory of intersectionality) has gotten her memoir published. I'll review it as soon as I can get my hands on it. Campus is in bloom with so many gorgeous flowers. Who can ask for anything more?
A great big shout out goes out to Crenshaw for her brilliant scholarship, Stratton for her eye opening narrative, and precious Tobago for being such a sweet snuggle buddy. 
Jules Hathaway 

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Monday, May 4, 2026

A sign of spring

On the UMaine campus. 



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Me

Finally able to wear a spring dress for which I got lots of compliments. 



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A heart shaped pancake 🥞

Bailey was especially proud of. 



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Bailey

Taking care of business at a UMaine pancake breakfast. There were regular, gluten free, and chocolate chip versions.



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Sunday, May 3, 2026

Milk and bread?

Not exactly but great rainy day surprises. 



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A Sea of Lemon Trees (juvenile historical fiction in verse)

     I had a big old to do list that I was planning to accomplish. But you know what they say about those best laid plans often biting the dust. Once I opened Maria Dolores Aguila's A Sea of Lemon Trees I couldn't put it down. The plot is engaging on both the cognitive and emotional levels. The characters are well developed and highly relatable,  especially the narrator. The plot is in free verse, always a plus in my mind. And young readers are introduced to yet another dark chapter in this country's history that those in high places want them to remain in the dark about. 
     Roberto is the youngest of four siblings. He resents being the only one treated like a baby, not let in on grown people's business. He has no clue that he'll soon be thrust into a frighteningly mature role. 
     He is also the only one of the siblings born on American soil, his parents' dream. This is both a blessing and a burden. 
     Before Roberto returns to school from Christmas vacation he is warned that he and the other Mexican will be sent to another building--one in which farm animals have been housed--for their education. His father tells him to come home instead. He does so and many of his peers do the same.
     "My daddy says we should just go to the 
          Olive Street School, says a girl with dark 
          brown trenzas. 
Her sister
hugs her rag doll a little closer. 
     They will call emigracion, says Pancho. 
     My mother says we are not going back to la 
          Caballeriza, no matter what, says David,
crossing his arms."
     As the children talk their parents are in a meeting discussing how to react to the sudden separate and far from equal direction their beloved children's education is going in. Imagine being in their situation where advocating for loved ones could come at an unbearable price. 
     The parents who won't give in organize a committee--communicating with the Mexican Consulate and raising funds for legal services. 
     The school officials retaliate. 
     The committee succeeds in taking them to court. Roberto is chosen as lead plaintiff, representing all the children. 
"It was okay when 
I was only my family's futuro 
but to be the hope
of so many other students' futuros
is frightening."
     Aguila provides readers with an illuminating history of the real life Lemon Grove Incident. 
     I highly recommend A Sea of Lemon Trees for public and school libraries although it will probably draw the hate of banners and censors. It can help younger readers understand not only the evils of the recent past, but stuff that's still going on today. As Aguila reminds us, "Never forget that knowledge is power, and every single one of us has the power to change the world."
On a purrrsonal note, this weekend has been nonstop cold drizzle and 🌧. Yesterday Eugene and I went on a drive and managed to find two Goodwills. Today Eugene went to the store to get milk and 🍞. He managed to fill a shopping cart. 
A great big shout out goes out to Aguila for creating a most excellent narrative and Eugene for not sticking to his shopping list. 
Jules Hathaway 


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