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School Library Journal
Starred Review on December 1, 2015 | Middle Grade
Gr 5 Up—This beautifully crafted and powerful collection of poems deals with a brief period (1825–57) in New York City's storied past. Seneca Village, on Manhattan's Upper West Side, was a thriving multiethnic community of African Americans, Irish and German immigrants, and, possibly, some Native Americans, until it was decimated by the creation of Central Park. After poring over the written accounts and census records, renowned poet Nelson sat down to imagine the lives of a number of the residents, giving voice to individuals based o...Log In or Sign Up to Read More
Horn Book Magazine
Reviewed on November 1, 2015
Seneca Village in Manhattan was founded in 1825 by free African Americans; by 1857 it had been razed to make way for the construction of Central Park. In forty-one poems Nelson spans the life of the village through the imagined reflections of its inhabitants. Some we meet just once, while others reappear: Epiphany Davis, forecaster of the future; Frederick Riddles, schoolboy turned soldier; and Sarah Matilda White, hair-braider and gossip. Most of the characters are African American, with a few Irish and Germ...Log In or Sign Up to Read More
Horn Book Guide
Reviewed on January 1, 2015
Seneca Village was founded in 1825 by free African Americans; by 1857 it had been razed for construction of Central Park. In fo...Log In or Sign Up to Read More