Muck
Enjoy Every Sandwich
Found this story on NPR. I had completely forgotten about this book but it was one I lived when I was a wee one.
'The Snowy Day': Breaking Color Barriers, Quietly
'The Snowy Day': Breaking Color Barriers, Quietly
One morning many years ago, a little boy in Brooklyn named Peter woke up to an amazing sight: fresh snow.
Peter is the hero of the classic children's book by Ezra Jack Keats, The Snowy Day, which turns 50 this year. Peter has a red snowsuit, a stick just right for knocking snow off of trees, and a snowball in his pocket. And, though this is never mentioned in the text, Peter is African-American.
"It wasn't important. It wasn't the point," Deborah Pope tells weekends on All Things Considered host Guy Raz. Pope is the executive director of the Ezra Jack Keats Foundation.
"The point is that this is a beautiful book about a child's encounter with snow, and the wonder of it," Pope says. Peter was among the first non-caricatured African-Americans to be featured in a major children's book. But Pope says Keats ? who was white ? wasn't necessarily trying to make a statement about race when he created Peter.
"He said, well, all the books he had ever illustrated, there had never been a child of color, and they're out there ? they should be in the books, too," Pope says. "But was he trying to make a cause book, was he trying to make a point? No."
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