Authors: Kathryn Erskine
I also wrote this story so readers would know that it wasn’t very long ago that people routinely judged one another by the colour of their skin or by their ethnicity. While we have come a long way, there is still a long road ahead of us. To the travellers on this road: Be brave; be strong; be leaders. As Red’s father would say,
I hear ya
. We all hear you.
Seeing Red's
Characters
George Freeman represents the African Americans who were run off their land, some of them killed, in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Early in the twenty-first century, the Associated Press researched and reported on murders and subsequent land theft, revealing huge losses of African American land between Reconstruction and the civil rights era.
Howard Carwile was a real-life white lawyer in Richmond who tirelessly represented many African Americans from the 1940s through the 1960s. White lawyers like Carwile and Judge Frank Johnson of Alabama fought for justice and equality, chipping away at a segregated South. African American lawyers such as Oliver Hill, Samuel Tucker, Henry L. Marsh III, and Constance Baker Motley, to name just a few, were particularly brave and stalwart in their efforts to achieve social justice. Any one of them is worthy of many books themselves.
Bill Reynolds is modelled after J. Sargeant Reynolds, lieutenant governor of Virginia, who died far too young in 1971. Among other forward-thinking actions, he attacked Massive Resistance; supported the election of Doug Wilder, an African American, to take his senate seat; and appointed the first girl page to the Virginia General Assembly.
Miss Miller is modelled after my sister, Jan Molnar, who is the best kind of teacher – the type who believes in and respects her students enough to hold them accountable for their actions and encourage them to question and think for themselves. Her surname, Molnar, is Hungarian for Miller.
Philip Walter is modelled after Leon Walter Tillage, author of
Leon’s Story
, about growing up in a sharecropping family under Jim Crow laws. After participating in civil rights marches, he became a janitor at a school in Baltimore, Maryland. He always maintained a spirit of optimism and dignity.
Miss Georgia is an amalgamation of strong women I’ve known over the years, from many races and cultures, whom I respect deeply, including my mother. I named her Fannie Mae in honour of Fannie Lou Hamer, a brave woman in Mississippi who never gave up being a civil rights activist despite death threats and beatings.
The story of Emmett Till, horrible as it is, is real. In this book, set in 1972, Red wonders how something so hideous could have happened as recently as seventeen years before. In fact, there have been many lynchings since the death of Emmett Till. We now call them hate crimes. One recent hate crime resulted in the beating and death of an African American man, James Anderson, in Mississippi in 2011 – thirty-nine years after Red wonders how such things could still happen.
Finally, Red’s last name is Porter for two reasons. Pullman Porters were early leaders in the civil rights movement, successfully creating a union and organizing events leading up to and including the March on Washington in 1963. I wanted to pay tribute to them. Also, a porter is a person who carries burdens and, symbolically, all of us are like Red, carrying the burden of our history and the responsibility for our current society. Red Porter is the hope for our future. He is modelled after you.
Kathryn Erskine
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
There are people I’ve never met and many I’ve never heard of who have inspired this book. Certainly, there are heroes such as Martin Luther King Jr., Fred Shuttlesworth, Shirley Chisholm, Barbara Jordan, Aretha Franklin, Fannie Lou Hamer, even Nelson Mandela, Bishop Desmond Tutu, and Helen Suzman, but so many more who were and are extraordinary people who deal with adversity – unspoken, unseen by some, but still present – every day of their lives. Their courage, patience, strength and spirit move me.
On a personal note, there are many people I’d like to thank for their help with this book, but I will name jusw a few: my mother, for teaching me tolerance and kindness and that you make the world the way you want it to be; Jan, for always being my big sister, protector, champion, friend, teacher, and first reader (who caught my typos); Keith Bruce, for help with Thomas, and for his laughter and life insight – we will always miss you, Keith; Shirley Parrish, for help with Miss Georgia, in particular, and for friendship in general; Mary Frances Bruce, Amy Stearns, and Laurie Stearns, for reading early drafts and being my friends and supporters for many wonderful years; my agent, Linda Pratt, who should become a diplomat if she ever changes careers, because she can deliver pointers and suggest changes with such grace and good humour that you want to rush back to the table and rework things to make them right; my editor, Andrea Davis Pinkney, whose vision, determination, and encouragement drove me to take this novel to a higher level and delight in its improvement; and, of course, my family, for believing in me, supporting my work, and becoming fans of “fend for yourself” dinners. Bill, thank you for your constant love and laughter on this beautiful journey.
Without all of these people, and dozens of writer compatriots, I wouldn’t have succeeded in publishing a work of which I’m proud. This book has taken a long road from its first draft over a decade ago. It has grown, faced hard facts, dealt with realities, and finally matured into an authentic story. There may be flaws or places where it stumbles, but it picks itself up and keeps going, heading for the truth. I hope it succeeds. I’m happy with its journey. I wish a similar path for all of us.
DISCUSSION QUESTIONS
USBORNE QUICKLINKS
For links to websites where you can find out more about the civil rights movement in America during the 1950s to 1970s, with eyewitness accounts, film clips, photo galleries and sound clips, go to the Usborne Quicklinks website at
www.usborne.com/quicklinks
and enter the keywords “Seeing Red”.
Please make sure you follow the internet safety guidelines displayed at the Usborne Quicklinks website. We recommend that children are supervised while on the internet. The recommended websites at Usborne Quicklinks are regularly reviewed and updated, but Usborne Publishing Ltd is not responsible for the content or availability of any website other than its own.
If you’ve enjoyed
Seeing Red
, you might also enjoy…
by Kathryn Erskine
American National Book Award Winner
“Erskine’s moving and insightful masterpiece delivers a compelling message for all.”
Publishers Weekly
Caitlin misses her brother Devon. Since his death, she has no one to explain the world to her. And for Caitlin, the world is a confusing place, full of emotions and colours that she can’t understand. Dad tries to help, but he also spends a lot of time crying in the shower.
So when Caitlin reads the definition of “closure” in the dictionary, she decides that’s what they need. And as she struggles to find it, she learns how to let a world of colour into her black-and-white life…
A bittersweet story told in the unforgettable voice of a young girl with Asperger’s syndrome.
ISBN: 9781409538585
ePub ISBN 9781409541677
YANKEE GIRL
by Mary Ann Rodman
“Moving and powerful.”
The Bookseller
Valerie’s voice is as sweet as honey. She’s the obvious choice to star in the Nativity. But this is Mississippi, 1964. Things are far from simple. There is uproar when Valerie is picked to play the angel…because she’s black. As one of the first black children to attend Parnell School, she has to face violent protestors outside and vicious bullies inside the classroom.
Alice is torn between standing up for Valerie, and being popular with the in-crowd, especially as she’s found it hard to make friends since moving to the Deep South. Struggling between guilt and fear, it takes a tragedy for Alice to find the courage to act.
A truly resonant story about racism and doing the right thing, based on the author’s own experiences.
ISBN: 9780746067499
First published in the UK in 2014 by Usborne Publishing Ltd., Usborne House, 83-85 Saffron Hill, London EC1N 8RT, England.
www.usborne.com
Copyright © 2013 by Kathryn Erskine. All rights reserved.
First published in the United States by Scholastic Press. British publication rights arranged with Wernick & Pratt Agency, LLC.
Cover photograph of garage © iStock / Thinkstock
Cover photograph of boys © Image source / SuperStock
Cover photograph of car © Bill Brooks / Alamy
The right of Kathryn Erskine to be identified as the author of this work has been asserted by her in accordance with the Copyright, Designs and Patents Act, 1988.
The name Usborne and the devices
are Trade Marks of Usborne Publishing Ltd.