Bluish

by Virginia Hamilton (Author)

Reading Level: 4th − 5th Grade

In this powerful novel researched in NYC schools, Newbery Medalist Virginia Hamilton documents the struggle young people face as they simultaneously assert their independence and yearn for guidance.

Friendship isn't always easy. Natalie is different from the other girls in Dreenie's fifth-grade class. She comes to school in a wheelchair, always wearing a knitted hat. The kids call her "Bluish" because her skin is tinted blue from chemotherapy. Dreenie is fascinated by Bluish -- and a little scared of her, too. She watches Bluish and writes her observations in her journal. Slowly, the two girls become good friends. But Dreenie still struggles with with Bluish's illness. Bluish is weak and frail, but she also wants to be independent and respected. How do you act around a girl like that?

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Publishers Weekly

Starred Review
Readers will come to cherish Dreenie's openheartedness.
Virginia Hamilton
Virginia Hamilton, the first Black to win a Newbery Medal and the first children's book author to be awarded a MacArthur Genius Grant, won the Coretta Scott King Award for The People Could Fly: American Black Folktales. She died in 2002 at the age of 66.

Leo and Diane Dillon, recepients of two Caldecott Medals, have illustrated five books by Virginia Hamilton, including the original black-and-white illustrations in The People Could Fly collection, Many Thousand Gone, and Her Stories. Leo and Diane Dillon live in Brooklyn, NY.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780439367868
Lexile Measure
460
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Blue Sky Press
Publication date
June 20, 2002
Series
-
BISAC categories
JUV000000 - Juvenile Fiction | General
Library of Congress categories
African Americans
Schools
People with disabilities
Leukemia
Wheelchairs

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