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Luke is an 11 year old slave, running away to try to join the Union Army during the American Civil War. Daylilly is a 9 year old slave girl whose master ran away and whose family has been killed. Caswell is a 7 year old white boy, whose father went to war with the Confederates and whose mother died in childbirth, leaving him alone. These three children, all lost and on the run for their own reasons, meet up in the woods, and quickly realize they'll all be better off together than alone.

This is a novel for young adults, but those who can handle deep subjects. Although the grusomeness of war is not dwelled on, when it's brought up, it is graphic. And the nastiness of racism isn't handled with a light touch either. The n-word is used a lot. There is a harsh realism to the book. The Union army is not portrayed as glorious saviors. It's plain that many of the Union soldiers are just as racist as the confederate ones.

But the friendship between the three protagonists is well developed and beautiful. Caswell is a typical Southern white racist... but he's 7 and alone in the woods. He rapidly realizes that Luke and Daylily are his only hope, and quickly grows to love them.

The book is divided into several segments. It starts immediately with the three children lost and finding each other. This section is one of survival. In the second part, they come across Betty Strong Foot, a free half black half native American woman who takes them in for a month or so. In the third part, they leave her and find their way to Harper's Ferry, W.Va. And in the final fourth part, we see each of the three grow up in little snippets that cover the next ten years.

One of the best books I've read in a while.
 
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fingerpost | 4 reseñas más. | Jan 22, 2017 |
Amazing the secrets that some people will keep and the lengths they will go to control a situation.
 
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JerseyGirl21 | Jan 24, 2016 |
During the Civil War, many children were made orphans. For the most part, they had to learn to survive on their own, like the engaging threesome in this inspiring story for adults as well as children.

Luke is an eleven-year-old orphaned slave in North Carolina who steals his master’s gun and runs away to join the Union Army. Along the way, he finds another runaway slave, a nine-year-old girl named Daylily who hid while the rest of her family was killed. Nearby where Daylilly is sleeping, Luke also notices a seven-year old white boy, Caswell. His father is off fighting the Yankees, and his mother has just been killed. At first, Caswell tries to control Luke and Daylilly, because he is white and they are black. But Luke and even Daylilly are so much bigger, and Caswell is so obviously alone and scared, that Luke just laughs at him.

The three of them decide to join forces to get help, and set off for the North. Luke feels responsible for the young ones, and takes charge of their safety and feeding. The small ones are more easily scared, and think about their dead families a lot. When Daylily is afraid, she sings the song her Granny taught her:

"Mama, are there any angels Black like me?
I’ve been as good as any little girl can be.
If I hide my face, do you think they will see?
Mama, are there any angels Black like me?”

Caswell isn’t so sure. He has never seen any pictures of any angels in heaven who aren’t white. Luke reprimands him:

"'I done already tole you. My mama is there,' he said quietly, 'and don't you never say that again.”

As the days go by, they bond more closely. Luke tells stories at night to calm Caswell's fears (even though the only stories he knows are the not-very-soothing stories of slave experiences). But Luke is trying to distract Caswell, and it works. Before Luke’s mama died (killed by her owner for insubordination), she told Luke, “Take care of your friends, Luke baby. A friend is a blessing from the Lord in this evil world.” And indeed, after days in the woods, hiding from the armies, enduring an encounter with a mountain lion, scrounging for food, combating fear and cold and illness, they were not only friends, but family. Even Caswell came to feel that way.

For a while, they were able to stay with Betty Strong Foot, a woman half-Indian and half-black, who feeds them and cares for them until it gets too dangerous. She then sends them off to Harpers Ferry, where they split up, with the promise to meet again in ten years in 1874 at Betty’s cabin. Luke gets a job, and keeps at it a long time, but wants to do more with his life. Daylily and Caswell live with a black family until Caswell’s father finds him after the war and takes him back to South Carolina. Caswell is appalled at his father’s racist rants, but doesn't leave until, as a grown boy, his father insists Caswell join in Ku Klux Klan activities. Daylily begins school, and also takes up teaching.

Would the three really find each other again? Would they feel the same after all the changes they have been through? What effect will the persistence of racism have on them over the years?

Evaluation: This is a lovely book that holds your attention to the end. The characters of the children are written totally true to their ages, in my opinion, which lends the book an unexpected charm. And there's plenty of suspense. I think readers will find it riveting. Highly recommended for middle grades and up.
 
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nbmars | 4 reseñas más. | Jul 18, 2010 |
After hearing Linda Beatrice Brown read from and talk about writing this book, I was looking forward to a good read. I got a great read. This book follows the lives of three children - two Black, one White - who find each other in the woods, after each has fled a different horror at home during the Civil War.This book for middle readers deftly balances vivid descriptions of the atrocities of war and racism with scenes of generosity and kindness. The definition of 'family' becomes more fluid. Loyalty, bravery and integrity shine all the more brightly in this book as they emerge from hardship, fear, and love.
 
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OvertheMoonBooks | 4 reseñas más. | Jan 1, 2010 |
Black Angels is a historical fiction account of three children who for various reasons find themselves lost and alone during the waning days of the American Civil War. First Brown introduces us to Luke, an 11-year-old slave running away to meet other runaways whose goal is to head north and fight for the Union. Then we meet Daylily, a nine-year-old slave girl, alone in the woods having witnessed an act of unspeakable violence. Finally we meet 7-year-old white Caswell, who is fleeing his burning home in search of his probably-dead mother. After their first rainy night alone, the three find each other in the morning, and figuring that without each other they will be totally alone, they form an unlikely trio and determine to head north to safety, or so they hope.

When the ragtag trio, in a moment of desperate need, happen upon a mysterious Indian woman, their paths are changed in more ways then one. She feeds them, clothes them, and seems to know the vast potential that lies inside each of "her" children. As the war drags on into its final days, her wisdom and love will prove even more invaluable than her provision.

Black Angels is a captivating tale of three children who become the forerunners of the many people who have helped heal our nation from years of hatred and prejudice. It teaches the timeless lessons that there are bonds much deeper than blood or color, that we are all essentially the same, and that love gives us the power to overcome in a world that doesn't always understand. It offers younger readers an unflinching but not overpowering glimpse of the Civil War and the miserable years of slavery and the extreme racism that continued long after the war had ended, but at the same time it employs its characters to show readers how wrong it all was and give them hope for our nation's and even humanity's future.

My one complaint would be that the book occasionally dabbles in preachiness, but the instances are few and don't take much away from the book, and for that matter, might not even be so noticeable depending upon the age of the reader. Other than that, Black Angels is a big hearted, beautifully crafted tale of the American Civil War, and I'd wholeheartedly recommend it to historical fiction fans both young and old.
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yourotherleft | 4 reseñas más. | Dec 20, 2009 |
For those who love stories set in the Civil War period, this is the book for you. This story transcends race. Black Angels is the story of Luke, a runaway slave, Daylily a slave whose master set her free and Caswell the white son of a plantation. These three children find themselves thrust together. Luke finds Daylily wandering around and Caswell joins them after the rebels burn their plantation. The three set off for the north hoping to find what they are each looking for. However, they learn that things in the north are not a whole lot different than things in the south when it comes to the color of your skin. I have read a lot of emotionally charged books lately and this one that I want my students to read. I am hoping that I can use the emotions I felt while reading this book to interest my students into picking it up.
 
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skstiles612 | 4 reseñas más. | Nov 29, 2009 |
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