Climbing aboard a “train” to a better life, third grader Thelma joins other African American children on the walk to school.
Again drawing on family history, the author of Black-Eyed Peas and Hoghead Cheese (2022), illustrated by Steffi Walthall, reframes her mother Thelma’s childhood as a series of imagined train rides—first to a one-room school, then, in class, further on to dazzling destinations like Oz and Treasure Island and back in time to hear about Harriet Tubman and other heroes. On the way, Thelma learns that “Mr. Jim Crow” isn’t a mean man who has driven her aunt and uncle away from their Louisiana town to California but a set of discriminatory laws and customs. “Just keep riding that schooltrain,” her father says. But Thelma has one more train to board, the kind with wheels, when her father loses his job. On the platform, her teacher calms her worries about going to a new school in Los Angeles by handing her a book: “You have your ticket.” Morris uses tissue collage and digital finishing to create richly hued scenes of brown-skinned, actively posed adults and children in small-town settings with, often, train tracks visible in the background. In a long afterword well stocked with personal photos, Armand retraces both the metaphorical and actual journeys, filling in details about Jim Crow as well as the Great Migration and her family’s experience of them. (This book was reviewed digitally.)
A vivid evocation of place and era rolling solidly on a bed of timeless values.
(Historical picture book. 7-9)