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All Different Now: Juneteenth, the First Day of Freedom (2014)

by Angela Johnson

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations
25115113,305 (4.2)None
Showing 15 of 15
Lovely. Includes plenty of back matter. (A little dated, now that Juneteenth is an official Federal holiday.) Remember, when any of us are enslaved, none of us are truly free. So read this even if you're white, even if you don't know any African-American people, even if it's not June or February. ( )
  Cheryl_in_CC_NV | Oct 18, 2024 |
Beautifully delicate watercolor illustrations leave a lasting impression of the story of Juneteenth, when enslaved people in Texas learned they were free. The illustrator shows a range of reactions, trying to imagine what it was like. Back matter includes a timeline of important dates (1863-1865), a few paragraphs on "Juneteenth, Then and Now," a list of online sources, and a glossary of key terms. Now that Juneteenth is a federal holiday the back matter is not perfectly up-to-date, but don't throw the baby out with the bathwater - this is still an incredibly worthwhile book. ( )
  JennyArch | Jul 24, 2023 |
Such a beautifully written and illustrated book that explains the history and movement of celebrating Juneteenth. It's written with language and emotion children can understand.
  KaraRW | Jul 15, 2023 |
A simple, beautiful telling of how news of freedom reached the last slaves in the South, those toiling in the hot Texas sun. Their celebration to mark the date lives on each June 19. Author’s Note, Illustrator’s Note, Timeline, Online Sources, Glossary.
  NCSS | Jul 23, 2021 |
There are two reasons I liked this book. In the picture book All Different Now: Juneteenth, the First Day of Freedom, narratives the day slaves would forever be free. The African American slaves, wake up to the news that they will now be forever free, no longer having to work in the cotton fields. The illustrator E.B. Lewis used watercolor paint. The illustrations give an illusion of photographs that have been stored in a storage as a memory keepsake. For example, the last illustration shows colors of browns, whites, faded blue and black. Only two cabins are shown with two wagons and a family walking away from the cabin. The writing fit in perfectly for the time period of this book. The words weren’t to lengthy or advanced for children to understand the change this day brough forward. The purpose of this book to for people to remember the day slaves were announced free. ( )
  ileonr1 | Mar 2, 2020 |
A young girl and her siblings wake to the smell of honeysuckle and set to work in the cotton fields as slaves. Paneled illustrations show news of their freedom spreading from "the port, to town, through the countryside, and into the fields." Once they receive word of their freedom, the girl's family eat, laugh, and tell stories into the night. The next day, she wakes to the same smell of honeysuckle, but everything is "all different now." The final page shows the former slaves leaving the fields with their belongings.
Simple, elegant, yet effective text used in this story: "that a Union general had read from a balcony that we were all now and forever free and things would be all different now." Angela Johnson very intentionally omits names and places; her purpose is feeling. She wants her audience to feel what people felt that day, Juneteenth. The details come after the story in a timeline of important dates from 1863-1865, the history of Juneteenth, online sources for further learning, and key terms defined in kid-friendly language. Excellent book. ( )
  HSunseri | Sep 23, 2018 |
The book tells the story about what happened on the day when the enslaved people of the south found out in that the Civil War was over and that they were free.

There are many black people I know that celebrate Juneteenth instead of 4th of July because for our ancestors this was their independence day. I think the book does a good job of explaining the holiday and its origins to a young audience. The author's note was the most powerful part of the book for me.
  fchloe1 | Mar 19, 2017 |
"All Different Now" tells the story of a young girl who is a slave on a plantation, along with the rest of her family. The central message of this story is even in the darkest of times, there is always a light at the end of the tunnel. The young girl and her family live the same life every day, picking cotton and working in the hot June sun. One day, their lives are changed forever as the Union decides to abolish slavery, setting the young girl and her family free. They are now free to live their own lives as they choose to on their own terms. ( )
  AndreaFrench | Feb 25, 2017 |
I enjoyed this book as the children in my class are learning about The Civil War. This book could be used at the end of The Civil War unit. It could be talked about how the characters were feeling once they were free slaves. ( )
  skeltonmorgan | Sep 6, 2016 |
This very simple book shows the relief and excitement that slaves felt as they heard about their freedom. The end of the story has information about the author, dates and vocabulary important to the time of this story.
Writing prompt: When is a time your life completely changed? How was it similar to what happened in the story? How was it different? ( )
  MareeTos | Feb 17, 2016 |
An emotional story about a family working in a Texas cotton field start the day as slaves, and end it as free people forever.

CC: timelines, American history, holidays we might not be familiar with
  jeziorskij | Feb 14, 2016 |
3 stars for the story and 1 additional star for the end pages:
Author's Note
Illustrator's Note
Important Dates
Juneteenth, Then and Now
Online Sources
Key Terms ( )
  CommunityLibrarian | Nov 26, 2015 |
The joy of the first Juneteenth beautifully imagined in exquisitely written text and stunning illustrations by E.B. Lewis. ( )
  Sullywriter | May 22, 2015 |
I read All Different Now by Angela Johnson. While reading this book I understood what it was about but it wasn’t as interesting as I thought it would be. This book is about when slaves found out they were free. In the book the slaves were in the cotton fields when they got word that they were free. Many people began to gather and rejoice. Even though this book isn’t specifically about a certain family, it can pretty much be an example of what many African Americans went through. The message of this book was to inform people about what it was like the day slaves found out they were free. ( )
  KinderelHodgson | Feb 14, 2015 |
If you don’t already know the story of Juneteenth Day, this book won't enlighten you until you get to the author’s notes at the back of the book. By starting at the end, you will learn that at the conclusion of the Civil War, many slaves did not yet know they were now free. [The author errs in her note (although not in her timeline) by stating that slaves were free as of the Emancipation Proclamation of January 1, 1863. This was a wartime measure and in any event did not free all the slaves; some 800,000 slaves in the border states alone were unaffected by the measure. It was not until the return of the Confederate states to the Union (for which a renunciation of slavery was mandatory) and their acceptance of the Thirteenth Amendment to the Constitution, ratified in December of 1865, that slavery was officially abolished. In the meantime, however, Southern States remained under military government. Thus, the notification of June 19th was in the form of a military order.]

Even after slavery became illegal, slave owners in Texas did not volunteer the news to their slaves. It was only when Union Major General Gordon Granger came to Galveston, Texas on June 19, 1865 and made the announcement, that slaves understood they were officially free from bondage. [And often, as historian Henry Louis Gates, Jr. reports, slaves took advantage of their promised freedom at some peril.]

The author observes that awareness of the significance of this date increased during the Civil Rights Movement of the 1960’s, and the date is now celebrated throughout the nation.

The book takes us through a summer day for slaves on a Texas plantation, slaves who do not realize that “soon, it would all be different.” As the news spreads, more and more people gather and:

"…we ate as a free people,
laughed as a free people,
and told stories as free people
on
into
the night.”

The little girl who is telling the story muses that in the morning, when they wake again, it will be a time that is “all different now.”

Illustrator E.B. Lewis does a remarkable job with muted watercolors in capturing the range of emotions that slaves must have felt upon learning they were free, from shock to disbelief to hope to ineffable joy. He also makes great use of shadow and changes in light to show the rhythms of the day.

Evaluation: While the illustrations are lovely, I would have liked to have seen some background information made available before the end notes, which in any event are geared toward adults. ( )
  nbmars | Feb 14, 2015 |
Showing 15 of 15

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