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Copper Sun
Copper Sun
Author: Sharon M. Draper
When pale strangers enter fifteen-year-old Amari's village, her entire tribe welcomes them; for in her remote part of Africa, visitors are always a cause for celebration. But these strangers are not here to celebrate. They are here to capture the strongest, healthiest villagers and to murder the rest. They are slave traders. And in the time it t...  more »
ISBN-13: 9780786289486
ISBN-10: 0786289481
Publication Date: 9/20/2006
Pages: 417
Reading Level: Young Adult
Rating:
  • Currently 4.5/5 Stars.
 1

4.5 stars, based on 1 rating
Publisher: Thorndike Press
Book Type: Hardcover
Other Versions: Paperback, Audio Cassette
Members Wishing: 0
Reviews: Member | Amazon | Write a Review

Top Member Book Reviews

reviewed Copper Sun on + 7 more book reviews
Helpful Score: 3
Unforgettable story of African slave trade - the horrors and cruelty of that era were well depicted. Unbelievable that this is so true. Follows a African teen from her being brutally taken from her village, the disgust and violence of slave ship trek, and the auctioning of her to a plantation owner, whom gives her to his son as a birthday present.
The relationship between her and a white indentured servant teen on the plantation is the ongoing basis of the book. I will never forget this story.
Winner of Coretta Scott King Award.
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GeniusJen avatar reviewed Copper Sun on + 5322 more book reviews
Reviewed by Cana Rensberger for TeensReadToo.com

I have been a fan of Sharon M. Draper for some time. She is a master at writing realistic fiction. COPPER SUN is her first historical fiction and it is amazing -- as well as frighteningly authentic.

This book follows the trials and tribulations of Amari, a fifteen-year-old African maiden. After witnessing the slaughter of both the old and young in her African village, including her parents and her young brother, she is chained, by feet, hands, and neck, lined up, and herded miles on foot to the ocean by pale skinned visitors with fire sticks. She watches her fellow Africans suffer incomprehensible humiliation and death at the hands of their captors as they are shipped like animal cargo across the ocean. The life that awaits her is nothing like she could have ever imagined.

Amari must adapt to life as a purchased slave on a rice plantation, a life that includes atrocities committed upon her by her white owners. She meets Polly, an indentured servant who has dreams of making it to the big house and being a fine lady of standing. Instead, Polly lives in the slave quarters and finds she's given the chore of civilizing Amari, now called Myna, and teaching her enough English to work. After witnessing murder, the two girls find themselves thrown together in a desperate run for freedom.

This is not just another book about slavery. This is a book about something real and tangible. Ms. Draper's writing is so vivid that you can smell the rank odors beneath ship. You can feel the pain of being lashed with a whip. Your throat will constrict at the heart-wrenching pain of a mother and child being forced apart. You will also celebrate the strength and spirit of Amari and those she inspires.

COPPER SUN won the Coretta Scott King Award. This is a book I will make sure goes on my classroom shelves.


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