This timely, heartrending novel tells the moving story of a friendship between two girls: one an American teen, one a victim of the crisis in Darfur.
Know that there are many words behind the few on this paper…
Fifteen-year-old Nawra lives in Darfur, Sudan, in a camp for refugees displaced by the Janjaweed’s trail of murder and destruction. Nawra cannot read or write, but when a nonprofit organization called Save the Girls pairs her with an American donor, Nawra dictates her thank-you letters. Putting her experiences into words begins to free her from her devastating past—and to brighten the path to her future.
K.C. is an American teenager from Richmond, Virginia, who hates reading and writing—or anything that smacks of school. But as Nawra pours grief and joy into her letters, she inspires K.C. to see beyond her own struggles. And as K.C. opens her heart in her responses to Nawra, she becomes both a dedicated friend and a passionate activist for Darfur.
In this poetic tale of unlikely sisterhood, debut author Sylvia Whitman captures the friendship between two girls who teach each other compassion and share a remarkable bond that bridges two continents.
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May 2013 BookPage Online
"Readers will feel shocked, outraged and saddened, but like K.C., they’ll ultimately be moved to learn more about Sudan’s ongoing injustices and the people they affect."
Booklist Online
"Teen readers will be moved by the personal connections and by the stories behind news headlines."
May 2013 The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Nawra’s gentle dignity and steely resilience in the face of such horror is so delicately portrayed…the plight of the refugees will be eye-opening for many readers.
The Horn Book
"In alternating first-person accounts and letters, fifteen-year-old Nawra, an “internally displaced person” living in a camp in the Sudan, and K. C., a fourteen-year-old girl struggling with learning disabilities in Richmond, Virginia, find strength in their friendship and begin to work through their problems.... These two correspondents make readers long to learn more about them and will likely inspire more than one to follow the author’s appended note on ways to help alleviate suffering in the Sudan."
Children's Literature - Greta Holt
K.C. Cannelli lives in Richmond, Virginia. She likes a boy, has a good friend, hates that her parents divorced, and dislikes school. She does look forward to getting out of middle school and attending ninth grade, if she can pass summer school. Nawra lives in an Internally Displaced Persons camp in Darfur, Sudan. She likes proverbs, has a good friend Adeeba, is sad that her mother sits without speaking, and puts up with standing in long lines for water. Nawra has made the trip to the camp after living through the destruction of her family, her home, and her honor. She is fourteen and pregnant. Rape has been used as a weapon of war upon her and the women she knows, yet even though she was circumcised at the proper age, being assaulted has made her a disgrace. Before he was killed, her father told her she was “spoiled meat.” Whitman provides a format in which each girl communicates through an organization called Save the Girls. Although K.C.’s world is safe, she must deal with her father’s refusal to pay for her special education testing, and the diagnosis she receives of learning disability. Nawra’s situation is searing. She cannot read or write, so Adeeba writes for her. Author Whitman reveals the horrific background of Nawra and her mother’s escape by providing memories that Nawra gradually, and discreetly, discloses to both Adeeba and K.C. At first, readers may feel distaste for K.C.’s privileged immaturity, but by alternating letters between Virginia and Sudan, Whitman moves minds and hearts to sympathize with both girls. Each deals with the troubles she encounters in her own world. The author’s ending note details her passion for the plight of IDP’s gained through her travels and Arabic studies. She provides references for further reading and gives information on ways youth can help people like Nawra. An excellent book/reading group guide with questions for discussion is supplied by Michelle Carson. Reviewer: Greta Holt; Ages 14 up.
Richmond Times Dispatch
"Whitman’s passionate, important novel draws a deep and intimate picture of suffering in Darfur that is eased by a sisterhood of compassion."
March/April 2013 The Horn Book
"In alternating first-person accounts and letters, fifteen-year-old Nawra, an “internally displaced person” living in a camp in the Sudan, and K. C., a fourteen-year-old girl struggling with learning disabilities in Richmond, Virginia, find strength in their friendship and begin to work through their problems.... These two correspondents make readers long to learn more about them and will likely inspire more than one to follow the author’s appended note on ways to help alleviate suffering in the Sudan."
May 2013 The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Nawra’s gentle dignity and steely resilience in the face of such horror is so delicately portrayed…the plight of the refugees will be eye-opening for many readers.
From the Publisher
"In alternating first-person accounts and letters, fifteen-year-old Nawra, an “internally displaced person” living in a camp in the Sudan, and K. C., a fourteen-year-old girl struggling with learning disabilities in Richmond, Virginia, find strength in their friendship and begin to work through their problems.... These two correspondents make readers long to learn more about them and will likely inspire more than one to follow the author’s appended note on ways to help alleviate suffering in the Sudan."“Nawra’s gentle dignity and steely resilience in the face of such horror is so delicately portrayed…the plight of the refugees will be eye-opening for many readers.”
"Teen readers will be moved by the personal connections and by the stories behind news headlines."
VOYA - Karen Jensen
Nawra lives in war-torn Darfur, Sudan. She can neither read nor write, but when her name is given to an American girl who becomes her benefactor, she begins reciting letters of thanks that share what her life is like. K. C., an American teenager from Virginia who is eventually diagnosed with ADHD and starts a Darfur club at school, is the girl paired with Nawra through the Save the Girls Foundation. As the two begin to converse through letters, they build a friendship that crosses a wide variety of barriers and inspires them both. The Milk Of Birds is told through both letters and chapters that highlight the lives and thoughts of the two main characters. Nawra's life in the Sudan is marked by war, fires, and the quest for things like clean water. In contrast, K. C. is being inspired by her mom to pursue her dreams. Differences in customs, such as the men in the Sudan having more than one wife and people getting divorced in the United States, are highlighted, as are the differences in opportunities, outlook, and access to everyday necessities. The scenes of life in Darfur are heartbreaking, such as when Nawra listens to a girl scream as she is being circumcised. The Milk Of Birds is a powerful story about friendship and hope that gives voice to a young girl from a region not often depicted in young adult literature. This highly recommended addition to a young adult collection is a strong, poignant look at the power of friendship and life in the Sudan. Reviewer: Karen Jensen
School Library Journal
Gr 8 Up—American eighth-grader K.C. struggles in school, her parents are divorced, and she feels like a failure next to her perfect brother. Nawra, 14, is illiterate and pregnant from a rape; she lives in an Internally Displaced People (IDP) camp in Darfur. The girls get to know each other through a letter exchange organized by a charity working in Sudan. Their story is told through first-person narratives and their letters. Nawra describes the brutal violence taking place in her country and the terrible things that have happened to her and her extended family-homes have been destroyed, bombs dropped, and women and children have been forced to witness atrocities being inflicted on loved ones. Yet she is thankful to be alive and draws strength from her faith and the proverbial wisdom of her grandmother, which she routinely shares in her dictated letters. She is able to nurse her mother back to health and reaches out to help those around her in spite of her difficult circumstances. K.C.'s problems seem pale in comparison, but Whitman deftly puts both girls' concerns in the contexts of their very different worlds. K.C. becomes active at school in helping raise awareness and funds to help the people in the IDP camp. Nawra's flashbacks and the time lag between letters can make it difficult to understand the sequence of events, but the horrific happenings are easier to take in and process in the girls' back-and-forth exchanges. In the author's note, Whitman writes how she hoped her novel would be historical fiction by the time it was published. Unfortunately, this is not the case. Nonetheless, this powerful and important book has a lot to say to young people about seeing beyond their own struggles and opening their minds and hearts to others.—Nancy P. Reeder, Heathwood Hall Episcopal School, Columbia, SC
Kirkus Reviews
In this debut, an American teen from Richmond, Va., and a Sudanese teen in Darfur exchange letters during 2008, transforming their very different lives. Fourteen-year-old Nawra has been raped, her family murdered and her village burned in Darfur's genocidal war. She's pregnant and living in an unsanitary refugee camp. Nonprofit Save the Girls matches Nawra with American pen pal K.C. Cannelli, an unconventional 14-year-old with an undiagnosed learning disability. Poised to fail eighth grade, K.C. feels like a "loser." For a year, Nawra and K.C. exchange letters every month. Illiterate Nawra dictates her letters to a friend, while verbally challenged K.C. speaks hers into a computer. Through these letters, Nawra's able to tell her horrific story to someone who cares. As K.C. discovers everything Nawra has endured, she becomes an advocate and fundraiser for Darfur's refugees. Progressing chronologically, the story alternates between Nawra's and K.C.'s first-person accounts and letters. Punctuated with Sudanese proverbs, Nawra's letters reflect her temperate, resilient, positive personality, while K.C.'s brash, humorous style appropriately relies on American idioms. A timely, authentic, inspiring story of two unlikely pen pals whose global, snail-mail communication makes all the difference. (author's note) (Fiction. 14 & up)
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