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The mighty Miss Malone  Cover Image Book Book

The mighty Miss Malone / Christopher Paul Curtis.

Summary:

Deza Malone, the smartest girl in her class in Gary, Indiana, accompanies her mother and older brother on a trip to find her father, an African American man who left to find work after the Great Depression hit. They end up in a Hooverville outside of Flint, Michigan, and her brother attempts to be a performer while Deza and her mother search for a home.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9780385734912
  • ISBN: 9780385904872
  • ISBN: 9780440422143
  • ISBN: 0385734913
  • ISBN: 0385904878
  • ISBN: 0440422140
  • Physical Description: 307 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
  • Publisher: New York : Wendy Lamb Books, [2012]

Content descriptions

General Note:
Publisher, publishing date and paging may vary.
Citation/References Note:
Wilson's Children, October 2012
School Library Journal, February 2012
Library Media Connection starred, August 2012
Pub Weekly, December 2011
Kirkus Starred, December 2011
Booklist, January 2012
Horn Book, November 2012
Bulletin (Center for Children's books), February 2012
Wilson's Children
School Library Journal
Library Media Connection starred
Target Audience Note:
4.4 Follett Library Resources
3-6 Follett Library Resources
3-6
750L Lexile
Study Program Information Note:
Accelerated Reader AR MG 4.7 10 148755.
Subject: Families > Juvenile fiction.
Depressions > 1929 > Juvenile fiction.
Poverty > Juvenile fiction.
African Americans > Juvenile fiction.
Historical fiction > Juvenile literature.
Families > Fiction.
Depressions > 1929 > Fiction.
Poverty > Fiction.
African Americans > Fiction.
Gary (Ind.) > History > 20th century > Juvenile fiction.
Flint (Mich.) > History > 20th century > Juvenile fiction.
Gary (Ind.) > History > Fiction.
Flint (Mich.) > History > Fiction.
Genre: Domestic fiction.
Historical fiction.

Available copies

  • 39 of 41 copies available at Missouri Evergreen. (Show)
  • 1 of 1 copy available at Reynolds County Library District.

Holds

  • 0 current holds with 41 total copies.
Show Only Available Copies
Location Call Number / Copy Notes Barcode Shelving Location Status Due Date
Reynolds County Library - Ellington Library YA CUR (Text) 3247100502990 Young Adult Fiction Available -

Syndetic Solutions - Excerpt for ISBN Number 9780385734912
The Mighty Miss Malone
The Mighty Miss Malone
by Curtis, Christopher Paul
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Excerpt

The Mighty Miss Malone

Chapter One Journey to Wonderful "Once upon a time . . ." If I could get away with it, that's how I'd begin every essay I write. Those are the four best words to use when you start telling about yourself because anything that begins that way always, always finishes with another four words, ". . . they lived happily everafter." And that's a good ending for any story. I shut my dictionary and thesaurus and went back over my essay for the last time. The best teacher in the world, Mrs. Karen Needham, had given us a assignment to write about our families. I knew, just like always, she was going to love mine. She'd only asked for two pages but this was our last essay for the year, so I wrote six. Once upon a time . . . in Gary, Indiana, lived a family of three very special, very happy and uniquely talented people. I am the fourth member of that family and much too modest to include myself in such a grandiose description of their exalted number. But many people say I am of the same ilk and for that I remain internally grateful. My mother, Mrs. Margaret "Peggy" Sutphen Malone, was born here in Gary, Indiana. She is willowy and radiant and spell-blindingly beautiful. She is also very intelligent. She has a great job cleaning for the Carsdale family. Yes, that Carsdale family! The family whose patriarch is the president of the Gary Citizens' Bank. Her most endearing trait is that she is the glue holding this family together. "Deza?" I jumped and my pencil flew out of my hand. When I'm writing or reading a book, everything else around me disappears. Father says it's because I've settled into what I'm doing, the same way my brother Jimmie does when he's singing. "Jimmie! I told you not to sneak up on me like that when I'm writing!" He handed me the pencil. "I couldn't help it, sis, you were so far gone. What're you writing?" "My last essay for Mrs. Needham." "You know, a lot of people are saying her not coming back to teach is the best thing that ever happened at Lincoln Woods School." "James Malone, if I ever give one-half a hoot what a lot of people are saying, you have my permission to slap me silly. Mrs. Needham is the best teacher in the world. Now, if you don't mind. I never bother you when you're singing, don't bother me when I'm writing." "But lots of people love listening to me sing, Deza, seems to me like only you, that little pest Clarice Anne Johnson and Mrs. Needham like reading what you write." Jimmie is one of those people who can say something that might sound mean at first, but when he smiles and makes his eyebrows jump up and down you can't help smiling. He gets this deep, deep dimple in his right cheek and you end up laughing right along with him. My dearest friend, Clarice Anne Johnson, has a horrible and completely un-understandable crush on Jimmie. She says she bets you could pour cornflakes in his dimple and eat them out with a spoon. I'm hoping Clarice's taste in boys improves as she gets older. "Jimmie, please." "Sorry, sis. I'm heading out, can I do anything for you before I split?" "No, thanks. Just make sure you're back for supper." I looked at Mrs. Needham's instructions again. "What is the most annoying trait of some of your family members?" That was easy to come up with for Father and Jimmie, but I couldn't think of a single annoying trait for Mother. I wrote: Mother's pet peeve is that she hates the way a lot of people are mean to Jimmie for no reason. Her dreams are to see Father get a job where he doesn't always get laid off, for Jimmie to start growing again and be happy and to watch me graduate from college and be a teacher. My father, Mr. Roscoe Malone, was born in a village in Michigan called Flint, which is geologically located 250 miles northeast of Gary. For some reason that none of us can understand he is very proud of this. He is tall and strikingly handsome, he's also intelligent and well-read. He toils and labors mostly for the Company doing work in a horribly hot furnace and sometimes being a janitor. His most annoying trait is the way he uses alliteration every chance he has. I looked up from my paper. That is so true, but I wondered for a minute if I should put it in the essay. It isn't like he can help himself. He always calls me his Darling Daughter Deza, and I'm supposed to answer that he is my Dearest Delightful Daddy. He calls Jimmie the Genuine, Gentle Jumpin' Giant, and Jimmie's supposed to call him his Fine Friendly Father Figure. Father also calls Mother the Marvelous Mammalian Matriarch, but she says she won't respond because she refuses to play silly word games with such a "hardheaded husband who hasn't heard how horrible he is." Mother told me, "Such nonsense is in the blood of the Malones and you should be happy that so far it looks like you haven't inherited any of it." She says Jimmie is a different story. I tapped the pencil on my teeth. I know it's rude and disloyal to discuss family business with other people, but Mrs. Needham says good writing is always about telling the truth. Excerpted from The Mighty Miss Malone by Christopher Paul Curtis All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

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