According to Arilla Adams, being twelve years old is "like
dangling at the end of a rope and not being able to let go."
And it's even worse when you come from a family that doesn't quite
fit anywhere. Arilla should know; she is twelve and interracial. Arilla
Sun Down is the story of her awakening to who she is and where
she fits within her interracial family.
Arilla tells her own story partially in half remembered, almost
dreamlike snatches from her early formative years, but mainly in
the voice of a typical seventh-grader living in a small midwestern
town today. In many ways she is typical: she fights with her
brother, Jack Sun Run Adams; complains about homework; has fears
she knows are unreasonable; and sometimes disobeys her mother
(most flagrantly with the off limits indulgence of her secret
passion for roller rink figure skating). But with a mother who is
black, a father who is part black, part Indian American, and a
radical sixteen-year-old brother who rejects being part of an
interracial tribe, (he will be the Indian his ancestors never
were), Arilla is not typical.
How Arilla "earns" an identity all her own and the
members of her family begin coming to grips with their collective
past is dramatized with sensitivity and sensibility. With Arilla
Sun Down, this distinguished Newbery Medal-winning author has
once again created a totally original and unforgettable family, a
fascinating chronicle, a bellwether novel.
Reviews:
"A powerful novel about a young girl's overwhelming
determination to understand who she is, where she came from and
where she is going." Scholastic Inc.
"Hamilton is a genius with words…Brilliant."
Booklist, starred review
"Dazzling, uncommon, impact." -- Kirkus Reviews
Awards:
Newbery Award American Library Association Notable Book A
School Library Journal "Best Book of the Year"
Author's note: Arilla Sun Down is somewhat
autobiographical in that it has two sources from my life. One
source has to do with my Indian heritage; my grandmother, Rhetta,
was said to be part Cherokee and my great-grandmother was Mary
Cloud, a Patawatami Indian. The other source is the strong African
American heritage and identity that I claim for myself and my
firsthand experience as a parent of interracial children. The two
sources fused in my mind in a question: What sort of family would
develop from a combination Indian and black American heritage if
the Indian was as dominant as the black? Arilla Sun Down is
a book about an interracial family – half African American and
half Amerindian – that is having difficulty figuring out what
each member is in terms of race. The terribly insecure daughter,
Arilla, is totally confused by her handsome brother, Jack Sun Run,
who sees himself as Indian. Arilla has little idea who she is and
where she fits in this racially mixed family.
I hope readers will enjoy this story of Arilla's coming of age.
As she learns more about herself, Arilla is better able to explore
her feelings. Her exciting experiences in the story help her find
out who she is in relation to her highly unusual family,
especially her brother, Jack Sun Run. By the story's end, readers
may well recognize her as not only a leader, but truly a heroine
for our time.