The Friendly Four

by Eloise Greenfield (Author) Jan Spivey Gilchrist (Illustrator)

The Friendly Four
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

THE FRIENDLY FOUR

Celebrate summer with Coretta Scott King Award winners Eloise Greenfield and Jan Spivey Gilchrist!

Drum: Didn't I call this summer a bummer?

All: Not anymore, not anymore.

Drum: I was alone, and life was lonely.

All: But not anymore,

Drum: 'cause we're the Friendly Four!

When Drum, Dorene, Louis, and Rae enter one another's lives unexpectedly, they embark on an unforgettable summer of discovery and creative play together. With individual poems and poems for multiple voices, Eloise Greenfield follows four children as they explore the bonds of friendship, family, and community.

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School Library Journal

Gr 2-4 -Free-verse poems tell the story of a group of children who find each other during one otherwise lonely summer. Seven-year-old Drummer is anticipating a -Bummer Summer -: -Summer -s a bummer, /nobody to chase, /nobody to catch the ball/I throw./Hurry up, September!/Get here, fall!/so I can be with/all my friends again. - Before long, though, Dorene moves in down the street. Then Louis arrives. The last of the group is Rae, who -s sent to stay with Dorene and her family because of her mother -s illness. The African-American friends all bond, play, and build and paint an elaborate cardboard town they call Goodsummer. The simple watercolors work well at setting scenes of tidy streets lined with homes and lots of backyards and parks. Gilchrist -s talent shows in her use of color, splashed with light, but some of her figures look a bit stiff. The children -s voices are printed in different colors, making this title a natural choice for choral reading. For a younger audience than most novels-in-verse, this accessible and well-written book has a nostalgic tone -you don -t see a television or computer game anywhere, and the children -s play is centered on activities such as dress-up, slides and swings, and playing school." -Lauralyn Persson, Wilmette Public Library, IL" Copyright 2006 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.
Eloise Greenfield

Eloise Greenfield is a celebrated poet and the author of more than forty books of fiction, poetry and biography for children, including the Coretta Scott King Award winner Africa Dream, The Coretta Scott King Award Honor books Mary McLeod Bethune and Childtimes: A Three Generation Memoir, co-written with her mother. Greenfield is the recipient of the Hope S. Dean Award from the Foundation for Children's Literature, and the NCTE Award for Excellence in Poetry for Children. She has received the Hurston/Wright Foundation's North Star Award for Lifetime Achievement, a Lifetime Achievement Award from the Moonstone Celebration of Black Writing, and has an Honorary Doctor of Education Degree from Wheelock College in Boston. Greenfield has also been inducted into the International Hall of Fame for Writers of African Descent. She lives in Washington, D.C.

George Ford is an award-winning artist who has illustrated dozens of children's books, including several by noted authors such as Nikki Grimes, Eloise Greenfield, Nikki Giovanni, and Robert Coles. In 1974, he was the recipient of the first Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award for Ray Charles. A lifelong jazz enthusiast, Ford lives in Brooklyn, New York, with his wife.

Classification
Non-fiction
ISBN-13
9780060007591
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
HarperCollins
Publication date
June 20, 2006
Series
-
BISAC categories
JNF042000 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Poetry | General
JNF053060 - Juvenile Nonfiction | Social Topics | Friendship
Library of Congress categories
Friendship
Stories in rhyme
Summer
Play
Texas 2x2 Reading List
Recommended 2007 - 2007

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