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Junebug
Junebug
Junebug
Audiobook2 hours

Junebug

Written by Alice Mead

Narrated by Peter Francis James

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars

3.5/5

()

About this audiobook

A boy. A birthday. A dream of a better life far, far away.

Some of the stuff that goes on in the Auburn Street Projects, I'm never gonna do.

These projects are like some kind of never-never land, like they never got put on a regular map. Nobody comes around here on purpose. It's as if we all got lost, right in the middle of the city.

Reeve McClain, Jr.—Junebug—has decided to skip his birthday. Since ten is the age when boys in the projects are forced to join gangs or are ensnared by drug dealers, Junebug would rather remain nine. Still, he does have a birthday wish: to someday become
a ship's captain and sail away. So Junebug comes up with a plan to launch a flotilla, fifty glass bottles containing notes with his wish, in the hope that someone somewhere will help to make his dream come true.

“A warm and inspiring tale … Readers will be rooting for Junebug and his dreams all the way.”—Kirkus Reviews
LanguageEnglish
Release dateFeb 1, 2013
ISBN9781470356446
Author

Alice Mead

A children's writer has the unusual task of developing a unique voice coupled with evoking the so-called magic of childhood. But is childhood truly a magical kingdom? I do know that childhood is a time so deeply and purely felt that adulthood can rarely match it. It is a time of great heroism, dashed hopes, leaps of joy, steadfast friendships, explosive frustration, utter hilarity, the shame of betrayal. Certain smells, certain words elicit powerful memories of childhood. For me, the smell of boiled brussels sprouts even now makes me feel utter revulsion. The smell of ethyl alcohol and the words "tetanus booster"cause sheer terror. The clap of an old, dusty book snapped shut and the words "hidden staircase" fill me with wonder. Where? Where? Tell me! How could I not write about childhood? When I was seven and eight, my family lived in postwar England, in an industrial Yorkshire city that still showed the devastation of World War II and the Nazi bombings. This left a lasting impression on me. The journey there, by ocean liner across the Atlantic, and my later poking about deserted misty castles and the dank Yorkshire moors, and smelling pungent coal fires, all created an unusual and not always pleasant adventure filled with questions. Was Robin Hood real? Was that truly King Arthur's castle? And had I really snapped a photo of the Loch Ness monster? The long, snaky streak still shows plainly in my faded photo. Back in the United States, I grew up during the Cold War, at the height of the nuclear arms race. I studied Russian for six years, or tried to, endlessly curious about the countries behind the Iron Curtain. And when I was eighteen, there was the Vietnam War. There were antiwar protests, Woodstock, flower children. I went to a Quaker college. I wanted to major in art, but there was no art department, so I majored in English. I started attending Quaker meetings. One summer, when I was twenty, I worked as an art counselor at a Fresh Air camp for inner-city kids. Watching their sheer delight in using paint and clay, I was hooked. I became an art teacher. I felt privileged to be with kids, to make my classroom a safe place where they could explore their own creativity. In the meantime, I married and had two sons, both of whom are now in college. One is studying economics and one physics. My husband and I have two dogs, and used to have the occasional rabbit, chameleon, hamster, and goldfish as visitors. My life was going along smoothly until I was forced to leave teaching because of a chronic illness. I had to rest a lot. That gave me time to work harder on my writing. I began writing a storybook about nature called "Tales of the Maine Woods." Although editors seemed to like the stories, they weren't willing to publish them. Eventually I gave the stories a grandmother, and then I gave the grandmother a granddaughter named Rayanne. Two of those original tales are part of my first book, Crossing the Starlight Bridge. For two years I watched the war in Bosnia, formerly part of Yugoslavia. In another part of this region, one million Albanian children are among the brutally oppressed. Even under these harsh conditions, they struggle to live in peace and dignity. The family bonds in their culture are extraordinary. I wrote about these children in Adem's Cross. Each day for the past four years, I have worked to help them, and all Balkan people, regain their freedom and human rights. Recently, other Quaker values besides non-violence became more meaningful to me. These are simplicity and self-reflection. My husband and I moved to a small house near a cliff overlooking the islands in Casco Bay, Maine. I have a flower garden that my dogs like to dig up. When I am stuck writing a story, I can go and sit on the rocks and watch the water for a while, something I have enjoyed doing through my whole life. Alice Mead was born in 1952 and attended Bryn Mawr College. She received a master's degree in education, and later a B.S. in art education. She founded two preschools for mainstreaming handicapped preschoolers, and taught art at the junior-high-school level for a number of years. She played the flute and piccolo for twenty-eight years, and now she paints, and enjoys gardening and writing--especially about a little boy named Junebug.

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Reviews for Junebug

Rating: 3.5 out of 5 stars
3.5/5

14 ratings4 reviews

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  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Decent little book -- Junebug is a very winning young man. It does feel a bit dated, which makes sense, since it was published in 1997. A little whiff of after school special, but also a kid who knows what he likes (sailboats) and has a plan to make that wish happen.
  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    This book was about a boy who had a sister who was little slow and had to take care of her in the afternoons after school. One day in class his teacher ask the class to write a paragraph about a wish. He had been keeping his wishes in glass bottles to bring out to sea on his birthday. He did not want to write his wish down because it would not come true. During all of this he is about to turn ten years old, and in the projects where he lived at ten you are suppose to join a gang, and he does not want to. His mother gets a better job offer and they move out of the project. This was a good book to read to third through fifth grade levels when you maybe talking about urban affairs
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    I think this is an important book for elementary students to read. My students do not live like Junebug. They don't understand poverty, gangs or drugs on their street. This was an eye opening book for my students. They were exposed to a life totally different than their own. I think is powerful read for students who don't know Junebug's hard life and for those who do.
  • Rating: 3 out of 5 stars
    3/5
    Junebug is the story of a 9 yr old who is about to turn ten. In Junebug's neighborhood, ten is a rite of passage that he does not want to take. Jun ebug dreams of being a crew member on a boat. He does not tell anyone because he thinks that dreams don't come true. He lives in the projects.I thought that this book was a little stereotypical having an African American boy live in the projects, having the dangers of gangs being a lot of the life there. She also has a bunch of the boys thinking their dreams should be of the NBA. Maybe she did this to make Junebug's journey of being different stand out. It is a chapter book that is good for readers in the elementary grades.This is not a series book but Alice Mead has written other Junebug adventures.