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BookDragon Blog

06 Apr / American Ace by Marilyn Nelson [in School Library Journal]

American Ace by Marilyn Nelson on BookDragon via SLJ*STARRED REVIEW
When Connor’s grandmother dies, she leaves his father a ring, a pair of pilot’s wings, and a letter explaining that the man who raised Connor’s father was not his biological father. With his father paralyzed by depression, Connor takes the two mementoes and the few details available to him and traces his new lineage to the U.S. Air Force, Wilberforce University, and an international DNA map that reveals European, African, and Jewish roots.

Marilyn Nelson narrates her own verses with graceful solemnity. Illuminating her rhythmic reading of Connor’s family’s story is an afterword, aptly titled “How This Book Came To Be, and Why an Older African American Woman Ended Up Writing as a Young White Man,” in which Nelson explores history – personal, national, worldwide – to affirm the surprising human interconnections in our very cells and souls.

Nelson’s latest deserves shelf space with other astounding verse novels, including Sharon Draper’s Stella by Starlight, Jacqueline Woodson’s Brown Girl Dreaming, and Thanhha Lai’s Inside Out & Back Again.

Review: “Multimedia,” School Library Journal, April 2016

Readers: Middle Grade, Young Adult

Published: 2016

By Smithsonian Asian Pacific American Center in Audio, Black/African American, European, Fiction, Hapa/Mixed-race, Irish American, Middle Grade Readers, Poetry, Repost, Verse Novel/Nonfiction, Young Adult Readers Tags > American Ace, BookDragon, Coming-of-age, Family, Friendship, Grandparents, Historical, Identity, Marilyn Nelson, Parent/child relationship, School Library Journal, Siblings, War
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