Sugar

Sugar

by Jewell Parker Rhodes

Narrated by Bahni Turpin

Unabridged — 5 hours, 23 minutes

Sugar

Sugar

by Jewell Parker Rhodes

Narrated by Bahni Turpin

Unabridged — 5 hours, 23 minutes

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Overview

For Sugar, life is anything but sweet.

Ten-year-old Sugar lives on River Road Plantation along the banks of the Mississippi River. Slavery is over, but working in the sugarcane fields all day doesn't make her feel very free. Thankfully, Sugar knows how to make her own fun, telling stories, climbing trees, and playing with forbidden friend Billy, the plantation owner's son.

Then a group of Chinese workers arrives to help harvest the cane. Sugar wants to know everything about them-she loves the way they dress, their unfamiliar language, and, best of all, the stories they tell of dragons and emperors. Unfortunately, other folks on the plantation feel differently-they're fearful of these new neighbors and threatened by their different customs. Sugar knows things will only get better if everyone works together, so she sets out to help the two communities realize they're not so different after all.

Sugar is the inspiring story of a strong, spirited young girl who grows beyond her circumstances and helps others work toward a brighter future.


Editorial Reviews

Publishers Weekly

In 1870 Louisiana, five years after the Thirteenth Amendment outlawed slavery, Sugar is still bound to the crop whose name she shares: “I’m ten now. I’m not a slave anymore. I’m free. Except from sugar.” Sugar and her mother had been waiting for the return of her father, who was sold shortly after Sugar was born; when Sugar’s mother died, her daughter was left with nowhere to go. Sugar’s caring guardians and her occasional adventures in the woods are bright spots in her life, but she feels left behind as friends head north. When “Chinamen” are hired to work on the plantation, Sugar’s community feels threatened; however, Sugar’s intuition, curiosity, and spirit move her to befriend the perceived enemy and bring everyone together. Rhodes (Ninth Ward) paints a realistic portrait of the hard realities of Sugar’s life, while also incorporating Br’er Rabbit stories and Chinese folktales. Sugar’s clipped narration is personable and engaging, strongly evoking the novel’s historical setting and myriad racial tensions, making them accessible and meaningful to beginning readers. Ages 8–12. Agent: Michael Bourret, Dystel & Goderich Literary Management. (May)

From the Publisher

Praise for SUGAR:


"[Rhodes'] prose shines, reading with a spare lyricism that flows naturally. All Sugar's hurt, longing, pain and triumph shine through....A magical story of hope." - Kirkus, starred review


"Sugar is superbly trumphant — both heroine and story. This glorious mainstay opens an underrepresented chapter in American history." - Rita Williams Garcia, Newbery Honor author of One Crazy Summer


"Sugar is sweet. Sugar is sharp. Sugar is to be savored. With nuanced storytelling, Jewell Parker Rhodes vividly portrays the brutality of the times, as well as the triumphs that arise when a community comes together. Those who read Sugar will be inspired to search deep within themselves to find the true meanings of friendship and freedom." - Andrea Davis Pinkney, winner of the Coretta Scott King Award

Andrea Davis Pinkney


"Sugar is sweet. Sugar is sharp. Sugar is to be savored. Told through the sassy-gritty voice of a child, this novel brilliantly blends cultures and traditions not often seen together-that of former slaves and Chinese workers harvesting sugarcane during the aftermath of slavery. With nuanced storytelling, Jewell Parker Rhodes vividly portrays the brutality of the times, as well as the triumphs that arise when a community comes together. Those who read Sugar will be inspired to search deep within themselves to find the true meanings of friendship and freedom."

Rita Williams-Garcia


"Sugar is superbly triumphant--both heroine and story. This glorious mainstay opens an underrepresented chapter in American history."

School Library Journal - Audio

★ 10/01/2013
Gr 5–8—Through the voice of 10-year-old Sugar, an emancipated slave in post-Civil War Louisiana, Rhodes's novel (Little, Brown, 2013) introduces a dark and little-known period of American history. Like the other freed slaves who stayed on River Road Plantation after the War, Sugar's life is tied to the sugar cane crop. It's a hard life of planting and harvesting for little pay, and she has learned to hate the crop for which she is named. When Mr. Wills, the plantation owner, hires Chinese workers to compensate for the slaves who have gone north, the older workers feel threatened. Sugar is a curious, gutsy young girl with a bit of mischief in her. She reaches out to the "Chinamen" and draws both communities together. Br'er Rabbit and Chinese dragon tales are woven throughout the book. In the appendix, Rhodes explains the origins of these tales and how she learned about the Chinese workers and their role in Reconstruction. The talented Bahni Turpin magically brings all of the characters to life with perfect inflection and expression, creating the illusion of a full cast of performers. Each voice exudes the character's personality, from sassy Sugar to the angry, bigoted overseer to young Billy Wills, who breaks the rules to become Sugar's playmate and champion. This is a strong and memorable tale, full of excitement and sorrow, humor and grit, illustrating a complex period of American political and economic history that is often overlooked.—MaryAnn Karre, West Middle School, Binghamton, NY

School Library Journal

Gr 5–8—Through the sharp eyes of a 10-year-old, readers experience the hardship of life on a Louisiana sugar plantation after Emancipation. Clever, courageous, and perceptive, Sugar is basically an orphan. Her mother died, and her father was sold five years before the story begins. She lives alone next door to Mister and Missus Beale, who have become her surrogate parents. Sugar wonders why she still can't do what she wants and why she still must work and live under miserable conditions. When she becomes friendly with Billy Wills, the son of the plantation owner, she can't understand why their friendship must be secret. Her feistiness and sense of loyalty shine in the poignant scenes when she insists on being with Billy when he is sick. When Mr. Wills hires Chinese workers to fill the void left by former slaves going north, Sugar is fascinated by their ways and their stories. She loves the Br'er Rabbit trickster tales Mister Beale tells in which Rabbit outsmarts the seemingly more clever hyena. As in Ninth Ward (Little, Brown, 2010), Rhodes has created a remarkable protagonist as she artfully brings American history to life. She shines a light on bigotry and the difficulty former slave owners and former slaves had adjusting to "freedom," and her skillful prose creates vibrant images of the story's milieu. Above all, though, this beautiful novel instantly grips readers' attention and emotions, holding them until the last word.—Renee Steinberg, formerly at Fieldstone Middle School, Montvale, NJ

JULY 2013 - AudioFile

On a Louisiana plantation during Reconstruction, 10-year-old Sugar challenges the limits of freedom and the meaning of family as she befriends the owner's son as well as the recently arrived Chinese laborers. Narrator Bahni Turpin is a master of capturing emotion, making her a perfect fit for this coming-of-age story set during changing times. Simultaneously sensitive and rambunctious, Turpin's portrayal of Sugar is magnetic. Her high-pitched voice, smoothed by a Southern accent, propels the story forward. African and Chinese folklore figure prominently in the story, and Turpin is mindful of how timing and inflection make all the difference in the story’s moral revelations. A.S. 2014 Audies Finalist © AudioFile 2013, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

Rhodes' book elegantly chronicles the hope of one 10-year-old girl seeking a bigger world in post–Civil War America. When Chinese laborers arrive, Sugar finally believes in a world beyond River Road Plantation.
In 1870, five years after the Emancipation Proclamation, many former slaves remain on their plantations--only now working for a bleak slave wage. Sugar was born into slavery on a sugar plantation and still lives there, feeling constricted and anything but free. To the complicated relationship she enjoys with the plantation owner's son, Billy, is added another, with newly arrived "Chinamen" Bo/Beau and Master Liu. Most Americans are aware of the brutality of slavery, but few stop to consider that the abolition of slavery created a new turmoil for former slaves. How would they make a living? Rhodes exposes the reality of post–Civil War economics, when freed slaves vacated plantations, leaving former slave masters with a need for labor. In doing so, she illuminates a little-known aspect of the Reconstruction Era, when Chinese immigrants were encouraged to come to America and work alongside ex-slaves. Her prose shines, reading with a spare lyricism that flows naturally. All Sugar's hurt, longing, pain and triumph shine through. A magical story of hope from Coretta Scott King Honor winner Rhodes. (Historical fiction. 8-12)

Product Details

BN ID: 2940172320965
Publisher: Brilliance Audio
Publication date: 05/07/2013
Edition description: Unabridged
Age Range: 10 - 13 Years

Read an Excerpt

Sugar


By Jewell Parker Rhodes

Little, Brown Books for Young Readers

Copyright © 2013 Jewell Parker Rhodes
All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978-0-316-04305-2



CHAPTER 1

Winter 1870

River Road Plantation


Everybody likes sugar.

Folks say, "There wouldn't be any good food without sugar." Like rhubarb cobbler. Blueberry pie. Yellow cake.

But I hate sugar. I won't eat it. Not ever.

"No sweets, just savories," I used to tell Ma. "Corn bread. Grits." Even nasty okra and green beans are better than sugar.

There's all kinds of sugar. Crystals that turn lemons into lemonade. Syrup that cools into taffy. Or pralines, brittle. There's even sugarcane you can suck until your lips wrinkle and pucker.

In the mill, there're mountains of sugar ready to be shipped from Louisiana to the whole wide world.

Ma would say, "Most folks think sugar is something in a tin cup or a china bowl. They don't know sugar is hard."

"Hard," I'd echo as she poured well water into a bowl.

"Months of planting, hoeing, harvesting. Bones aching, sweat stinging your eyes. Dirt clings everywhere."

"Beneath nails, toes. Even in my hair," I'd complain before splashing my face with water.

Me and Ma always smelled of sugar, sweat, and dirt.


"What did I smell like when I was born?"

"Spring," she'd whisper, wiping my face dry. "Not Planting-Day spring. Just spring. Blooming, lemony, and fresh."


I wish I could remember that clean smell.

When I was two days old, Ma strapped me to her back and cut cane.


Nights, we ate cornmeal cakes. Then me and Ma would lie on our hay mattress on the packed-dirt floor.

"Sugar's hard," she'd sigh, kissing my cheek, twice, before sleep.

Before another day tending cane.


River Road is almost nothing but cane. There're two rows of slave shacks. Mostly empty now. There's the big plantation house where the Willses live. The mill where cane is boiled and dried into crystals. The stable and henhouse.

The rest is cane. Growing ten feet high, row after row, as far as the eye can see. When wind blows, cane hisses, comes alive, swaying like a dancing forest. Thin, pointy leaves lick the air, flapping like streamers. It's pretty. 'Til you get close. Then sugar gets nastier than any gator.

Sugar bites a hundred times, breaking skin and making you bleed. Each leaf has baby teeth on all its edges. Even with work gloves, tiny red pricks itch everywhere. My cheeks get smacked. By harvest's end, my face, hands, and arms are all cut up.


Outside River Road Plantation, nobody cares who cuts cane. Nobody cares my hand swings the machete, bundles, drags stalks onto the cart.

At River Road, my hands are the youngest. Everyone else's hands, except Lizzie's (she's two years older than me), are old and wrinkled. Grown hands, stiff and scarred. Sometimes the old folks put their hands in warm water with peppermint to heal. Or rub them with fatback sprinkled with cayenne.


I've lived at River Road my entire life. Cane is all I know. Cutting, cracking, carrying pieces of cane. My back hurts. Feet hurt. Hands get syrupy. Bugs come. Sugar calls—all kinds of bugs, crawling, inching, flying. Nasty, icky bugs.

I hate, hate, hate sugar.


During harvest, Mister Wills sets lamps so folks can cut cane all night. "Cane won't wait," he says. He shouts, "Cane time, cuttin' time." Or he snarls, "Two bits extra for the most cane cut." Then, everybody speeds up and there're more tiny bites. Just like teeth chew rows of corn, sugar-teeth chew on you.

Mister Wills keeps complaining, "Not enough cane workers."

I think, Why isn't he helping, then?

Mister Wills just walks and watches everyone work. Behind him, Tom, the Overseer, cracks the whip, spraying dirt.


Since Emancipation, there're not enough workers. Almost everyone young enough, without gnarled, crinkly brown hands, has gone north.

"Some folks are scared to leave," said Ma. "They say, 'The bad I know is better than the bad I don't.' They don't believe they have strength left for adventure."

"We're ready for adventure. We're strong."

"That's right," said Ma, hugging me close.


We waited for Pa, who was sold right after I was born, to come back for us. We were going to run away. Head north. We waited and waited. When the war started, Ma whispered, "Pa's fighting for the Union. I just know it. Helping to free us." We waited for him, proud, hoping. The war ended. President Lincoln won. Still, we waited. Five years of freedom and Pa still didn't come.

Then Ma got sick and died. Her strength drained like water.

I'm ten now.

I'm not a slave anymore.

I'm free.

Except from sugar.


Harvest Is Done

Tonight, folks are smiling, rocking, clapping hands. Everyone is happy, rich. Mister Wills has paid us our dollars.

Dollars won't last long. After we buy cloth, seeds, lamp oil, and chicken feed, we'll be just as poor as when we were slaves. But tonight, everyone is proud. Tonight is like Christmas.

Tomorrow, everybody can rest.

"Thank the Lord," says Mister Petey in his gravelly voice. "Another harvest done. Thank goodness, I can sleep."

I think, Thank goodness, I can play. Go where I want. Do what I want.

"No need to wake early," says Missus Ellie, tired, her chin quivering. Sick or well, she cuts cane. Like me, she has no blood family. "I'll sleep 'til noon."

I'll be up at sunrise.

The campfire crackles. Everybody's outside our stuffy shacks.

Stars are blinking. A breeze carries wet air from the Mississippi.

"No work tomorrow!" shouts Mister Beale, stretching his fingers toward the moon. All along his arms are scars, thick and knotted.

He smiles at me.

I smile back. I love Mister Beale. He tells me stories even though Missus Beale thinks they're useless. "You could be working, eating, sleeping. Humph, humph, humph," she says, disapproving. "Made-up stories are a waste of good time."

I'm hoping Mister Beale will tell one of his Br'er Rabbit and Hyena tales. Tell how Rabbit tricked Hyena into falling in the river, how Hyena got stuck on a mountain ledge. How Rabbit always fools mean Hyena.

My eyes are heavy. Last day of harvest is as hard as the first.

Lizzie sits down beside me, tugging her shift over her knees, her hands folded primly in her lap.

"Hey," I say.

"Hey," she answers, her mouth downturned. Since the Johnsons and their boys, Mo, Charlie, and Lloyd, went north, she's been lovesick. Lizzie's stuck on Mo, even though he's got big ears, big teeth.

Lizzie's my only friend. When we aren't working, we've always had fun together. We're the only kids left. But Lizzie doesn't climb trees anymore (she sighs instead), she doesn't run (she swishes), and she doesn't like pranks ("Childish," she says).

"Let's play rope," I say. "Tomorrow. Early, first light."

"No."

"Next day?"

"We'll see."

Looking right, I can see the horizon, a red glow for miles in the darkness where the sugarcane used to be. I can even see clear to the big house, its windows glowing. Mister and Missus Wills are having a party, too. Manon and Annie, the house servants, roasted a pig.

I twirl my pigtail around my finger, scratch the scab on my knee.

Mister Waters, the boiler man, plays a banjo made of wood and wires. One side of his face and arm are burnt pinkish-white. Syrup, in the cauldron, bubbled and burst. His arm saved half his face. He plucks, delicate. Still, the sound is harsh and sweet, clanky and bright at the same time.

I'm still hoping for a story.

Old folks are dancing. Mister Beale stomps his feet. Missus Beale claps. Mister Petey pounds his thighs like a drum. Missus Celeste, whose job it is to watch the syrup cool and carefully separate brown crystals from white, is stepping side to side, twirling with an imaginary friend.

I glance sideways at Lizzie. She's staring at nothing, yet her face is marked with longing. My friend has disappeared. Grown up. Gotten old, older than me.


Folks who left River Road hooted and hollered: "Going north"; "Going to live up north"; "There's new life in the North." Even Mister Beale's pretty daughter and eldest son got starry-eyed and caught north fever. They begged their parents to go with them. Mister Beale told them, "We're too old, too slow."

I'm not too old or slow! But no one left will take me.

Up north, I could find new friends. Or old ones—Winnie, Charlie, and Ulysses. But I'm afraid to go by myself. No one who went north has ever come back.


Still, it's a good night. My stomach is filled with red beans, a little pork.

Tomorrow, I'll search for an eagle's nest.

I smile, then quickly squeeze my lips shut. Missus Thornton is bearing down on me. I scramble up. Just 'cause she's the preacher's wife, she feels a "calling," as Ma said, "to fix everything. And everyone!" She's got her determined "pity- pity" look. Pity poor me, she thinks. Pa gone. Ma gone. "Scrawny. Pitiful child," she says. "This is what you need."

I try to scramble away. She catches my sleeve and pushes a plate in front of my face. Bars caked with sugar. Squares of sickly sweet stuff.

I gag. I can't help it. I cover my mouth. Then drop my hands. I throw up.

Missus Thornton screams, "Sugar!"

Then I start to cry. Sugar is my name.


Freedom

I stretch, wriggling my toes, arching my back. No cane today!

Even though it's cold, I don't care. I throw off my blanket and slip on my shoes. The soles are thin; I feel every pebble. I get my shawl, wrapping it over my head and shoulders. I grab a biscuit, then dash onto the porch, wanting to crow, like Rooster Ugly, at the brightening sky. Everyone else is still asleep. Sleeping on the floor of our old slave shacks. Even Rooster Ugly hasn't stirred.

Puffs of white clouds float like meal cakes. Frost covers the dirt yard, the shacks' porches and steps.

I'm off, running. Free. Sprinting to the river, my soles flapping against my bare feet.

I run, swallowing big gulps of air. I run past cane fields, then up the grassy knoll where the big house sits to keep dry when the river overflows.

I smell the Mississippi before I see it. Muddy and tangy from algae, marsh grasses, and sedge. Nothing like sugar!

I whoop down the riverbank, kicking up dust, tiny rocks. I startle a raccoon. I pass trees, some dark and shriveled, some bright and evergreen. The sun rises, making the frost sparkle.

I see it—the Mississippi River, powerful, wide, and stretching long. Looking left or right, you can't tell where water ends.

I wave at the sailor atop a barge. He waves back.

"Take it away," I shout. "Take the sugar away!"

The sailor salutes me.

I twirl, pinch my shift, and curtsy.

Dozens of men are hauling sugar onto the barge. There are tracks that run the miles of fields, straight to the mill. From the mill, huge metal buckets of brown sugar are pushed, pulled down the tracks. Straight to the dock.

I run, fast and hard along the riverbank. Darting northward, I'm a ship chugging to St. Louis. Then I turn around and run south. Chug-chug-chugging down to New Orleans.

The barge hoots long and low. Ooooo. Ooooo.

Bye, sugar. Bye. Good riddance.


River water stretches into land, making shallow coves, streams, and swamp marshes. Dropping my shawl, I squat where the water's not too deep.

I splash my hands in the water. It's muddy brown. Reeds, grass, and algae choke the water. Bluegills skim the surface, puckering their mouths, eating bugs. A pelican dives for breakfast.

I see a turtle.

I slip off my shoes and step into the cold water. I clench my chattering teeth. "Luck, luck, luck," Ma told me. "Touching a turtle's back brings luck."

Sand and mud are racing over my feet, through my toes. The turtle's little legs are flapping, stroking faster than I can walk. Water swirls around my knees. I take wider, bigger steps. I reach.... I reach.... I fall.

Splash.

The turtle shoots away, dives, and disappears.

I'm wet, shivering.

Quick, I stand, happy the water isn't deep. Happy there aren't any snakes. Or worse, gators.


Onshore, I squeeze water from my shift's hem.

I hear a whistle, sharp and shrill.

I stare into the trees. Wind's rustling leaves, holly bushes. Everything else is still. Quiet.

Who's out there? Overseer Tom? A chicken thief? A peddler?

I'm not afraid of them.

Chin up, I gather twigs, sticks, and dry grass. I start a small fire and sit, wrapping my shawl close. I get warm, warmer.


I undo my kerchief and bite into the biscuit.

I hear a whistle again.

Billy Wills, the owner's son, steps out of the bush. Leaves are pasted on his clothes; his face is brushed with mud.

"You've been following me?" I shout, angry. "Watching me, Billy Wills?"

Billy grins, his eyes blue as robin's eggs. "Did you guess? Did you know it was me?"

" 'Course I did," I say, grumbling. But I didn't. I've always been told to keep away from Billy.

Billy stoops, palms stretched toward my fire. I'm not used to seeing him up close. His pants are wool; he has thick-soled shoes. His legs and feet aren't cold like mine. He never has to work.

"I found rabbit holes."

I don't say anything.

"They were so deep. Wide enough I could fit my arm in them. I tried to catch a rabbit, but I couldn't."

"Silly. Rabbits are smart. They saw you coming. Hyenas are dumb."

"What's a hyena?"

Mister Beale says a hyena is like a fox, but it lives in Africa. I don't tell Billy. I should go. I'm not supposed to talk to him.

Billy shouts, "Look." He jumps up, stands, upside down, on his hands.

"That's nothing." I bend, roll over twice, and leap like a rabbit.

"I can do this." Billy turns sideways, hops, then he's upside down, his feet, his hands, his whole body spinning like a wheel.

"Teach me," I shout.

"Won't."

"You're mean."

"Tell me, then—what's a hyena?"

Stubborn, I yell, "Won't."

"Sugar. Sugar. Sugar," Billy taunts.

My hands cover my ears.

"Sugar. Sugar. Sugar."

"Stop it," I scream. I will not cry. I will not!

"I'm sorry," says Billy. "I know you hate your name."

"How'd you know?"

"I hear stories from the cooks. Manon and Annie."

"Good ones?"

"Not about you."

Indignant, I roll my eyes. Grown-ups think I'm trouble.

I look at Billy. He's a mess. Like me.

I'm wet, hair tangled, with algae sticking to my feet. Billy's clay-streaked face is cracking, his hair's limp, and his twig-crown is busted into a dozen pieces on the ground.

I point at Billy, he points at me, and we both start laughing.

"Sug—" He stops, then starts again. "You made a good fire."

I smile.

"Want to play?" Billy asks.

"I thought you didn't like girls."

"Girls are okay. Pa doesn't want me to play with slaves."

"I'm not a slave. I'm free."

"Only 'cause Lincoln won. Pa says, 'Times are changing.' He doesn't like it."

"Do you like it, Billy Wills?"

Billy stares at the ground like there's money covering it.

I kick dirt into the fire. Sparks fly.

"I like you," he mumbles.

I don't believe my ears. Billy's face is red.

"You used to wear a yellow ribbon."

I touch my pigtail. Ma gave me that ribbon. I put it in her coffin.

"Look. Look what I got." Billy's palm opens. In his hand is a tube, woven red and yellow.

"Can I?"

Billy nods.

I pick up the tube, as long as my hand, and look through it like a telescope. I see Billy's grin.

"Isn't it pretty?"

I roll it over and over. I've never seen such a thing. It's beautiful.

"Where'd you get it?"

"Pa. He brought it from New Orleans. Try it. Put it on your fingers."

"Can I?"

"Sure."

I put one index finger in one hole, then the other finger in the second hole. The tube sparkles, bridging my two fingers and hands.

I pull my fingers outward. They're stuck!

Billy is laughing, whooping, hopping from foot to foot. "Got you. Got you."

"You tricked me." I'm madder than a bee.

"Gets them every time! You should've seen my ma, twisting. My tutor turned purple!"

"Aw," I howl. My fingers are trapped. I'm pulling, hard, my fingers are red, straining. I can't use my hands. Or even wiggle my fingers. Then, I flap my arms, high and low, like a mixed-up bird. "Take it off. Take it off."

I'm wriggling, fighting like a catfish on a line.

Billy touches my arm. "Relax." His voice is soft.

He taps the tube, so hard and bright.

"Don't pull," he says. "Push."

I push my fingers, and, magically, they're free; the tube slips off, falling into Billy's hand.

"What's it called?"

"China finger trap. Pa thought I'd like it."

"Do you?"

"Yeah. 'Specially with grown-ups. Boy, do they get mad!" He tosses the tube into the air.

I wish I had one.

"I was only playing," says Billy. "If I wasn't, I would've let you squirm all day."


(Continues...)

Excerpted from Sugar by Jewell Parker Rhodes. Copyright © 2013 Jewell Parker Rhodes. Excerpted by permission of Little, Brown Books for Young Readers.
All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
Excerpts are provided by Dial-A-Book Inc. solely for the personal use of visitors to this web site.

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