The
Nickel Boys
by
Colson Whitehead
Synopsis
Before
his life gets upended after being in the wrong place at the wrong time, Elwood
Curtis is known as a good kid. As a
teenager in the 1960s living in Tallahassee, Florida, Elwood was a budding
social justice activist, responsible employee, and good student who was set to
begin early college classes. However, in a cruel twist of fate, he ends up sentenced
to time at The Nickel Academy, a reform school for boys (based on the real-life
Florida Industrial School for Boys, later known as the Dozier Academy). Elwood quickly finds out that corruption and
racism run rampant among the staff members at Nickel Academy and punishments are
severe with several boys being sent “out back” never to be heard from again. Elwood battles throughout the story with his desire
to seek justice and his need to survive.
Elements of Appeal
-
Story
Line: The story
begins by establishing Elwood’s character as that of a good teenage boy who excelled
in his studies and stayed out of trouble. When he is arrested and sentenced for
being in the wrong place at the wrong time, he is sent to a reform school rife
with corruption, The Nickel Academy.
With separate campuses for the white and black students in the Jim Crow
era, it becomes apparent that staff and administrators are often racists and the
black students are thus subject to harsher punishments. The
story tells how Elwood and his fellow students adapt to survive their time at
Nickel. There are chapters that flash forward
to show Elwood in current day and how his time at Nickel affects his current
life.
-
Tone: The introduction to the book tells
the story of the real-life inspiration for the Nickel Academy, the Florida Industrial
School for Boys, where mass graves were found upon the closure of the
school. This creates a foreboding sense
of doom for the characters knowing that there were many students who didn’t
make it out of the school alive and most who did left with physical scars from
being whipped. Many of the students at
Nickel Academy were from broken families, if there was any family at all, and there
was little hope for their futures which added to the desperation and doom felt throughout
the story.
-
Characterization:
The main character,
Elwood, is a teenage boy being raised by his grandmother after his parents
abandoned him. Elwood is inspired to
join social justice movements after being gifted an album of a Martin Luther
King, Jr. speech, and that motivation to right what is wrong means that he puts
himself in danger at Nickel Academy. Secondary characters are boys who have already
been in trouble with the law at a young age, many who have been orphaned or abandoned
by their families, and those characters show the struggles the boys faced as
they tried to survive on their own at a young age.
-
Frame/Setting: The story is set during the
Civil Rights movement in the 1960s in the American South. Framing elements include many references to Martin
Luther King, Jr., particularly his famous speeches and quotes.
-
Language/Style: The language used reflects the
culture and the times with staff including racial slurs and demeaning terms
aimed at minorities.
Read-a-likes
The
Vain Conversation
by Anthony Grooms
Ruby by Cynthia Bond
Delicious
Foods by James
Hannaham
.png)
Wow, your summary and appeals really make me want to read this book. Did you enjoy it? I heard a lot about this, but never got around to reading it. Excellent job and full points!
ReplyDelete