Product Details
Across the Alley

Across the Alley
By Richard Michelson

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Average customer review:
Maura says "This is a baseball story about a Jewish boy and an African-American boy. The story teaches respect for other people's cultures and traditions"

Product Description

Abe and Willie live across the alley from each other. Willie is black and Abe is Jewish, and during the day, they don’t talk. But at night they open their windows and are best friends. Willie shows Abe how to throw a real big-league slider, and Abe gives Willie his violin to try out. Then one night, Abe’s grandfather catches them—will Abe and Willie have the courage to cross the alley and reveal their friendship during the day?

Like the bestselling The Other Side, E. B. Lewis’s striking, atmospheric watercolors bring to life a moving story of baseball and music, and how two young people try to bridge the divide of prejudice.


Product Details

  • Amazon Sales Rank: #560386 in Books
  • Published on: 2006-10-05
  • Original language: English
  • Number of items: 1
  • Binding: Hardcover
  • 32 pages

Features


Editorial Reviews

From School Library Journal
Kindergarten-Grade 3–The poignancy of two boys who can be friends only at night is revealed brilliantly in both text and rich watercolor art. Willie's dad, a starter in the Negro leagues, expects that his son will pitch in the majors. Abe's Jewish grandfather, a violinist in the old country before World War II, is sure that his grandson will be the next Jascha Heifetz. What neither man knows is that the boys have been sharing their talents across the alley at night. When Abe's grandfather discovers that it's Willie's beautiful music he has been hearing, he invites him to perform at the temple. As Willie's dad, Abe's grandfather, and the two boys walk there, people stare at them, and Willie's dad says, Ignorance comes in as many colors as talent. Nobody wants to sit by Willie and his father in the temple, but the boy is as victorious at the recital as Abe is at the baseball game later that afternoon. Best of all, supported by their loving families, the expectation is that they now can be friends in the light. With lovely art that captures the joy both boys feel about their respective talents, this endearing picture book offers a compelling message about overcoming prejudice.–Alexa Sandmann, Kent State University, OH
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist
Racial differences keep Abe and Willie apart during the day, but at night they lean out of their bedroom windows and talk together. Willie shows Abe how to pitch a slider, and he proves himself adept at the violin that Abe hands across the alley. Lewis fills out his urban setting with indistinct figures and details for a timeless feel, though text references to Sandy Koufax and Satchel Paige give the background a general fix. Abe turns out to be better at baseball than Willie, and when the lads' secret comes out, it's Willie who gives a recital at the temple, and Abe who takes the sandlot mound. Willie's father makes the point explicit: "Let people stare . . . Ignorance comes in as many colors as talent." Despite some careless detailing (the alley looks too wide for passing a violin, and Willie holds the slider incorrectly), this purposeful tale works well as a similarly themed companion to Jacqueline Woodson's Other Side (2001), also illustrated by Lewis. John Peters
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

About the Author
Richard Michelson owns the R. Michelson Gallery in Northampton, Massachusetts, where he also lives.

E. B. Lewis recently won a Caldecott honor for Coming on Home Soon. He lives in Folsom, New Jersey.


Customer Reviews

Perfect for grandparents and grandchildren5
This beautiful book is perfect for grandparents to enjoy with their grandchildren. Who else could fondly recall the alleys, stoops, and apartment houses where children could lean out of bedroom windows to speak with a friend across the way? References to Sandy Koufax, Satchel Page, Jascha Heifetz, and the Negro Leagues help set the time and place. Artist E.B.Lewis' grainy, sensitive watercolor paintings make this story of breaking stereotypes, irresistible. Like the engaging narrative, the paintings leave a lot of space for the reader to imagine the details. Lewis' free brush strokes are rich and airy at the same time and the images of people are warmly represented. There's a charming, smiling grandpa wearing his yarmulke, full of hope that his grandson, Abe, will be a great violinist. Grandpa's other expectation is that Willy, the African-American boy from across the alley will be a future baseball player in the Negro Leagues. Grandpa turns out to be very wrong, and as stereotypes are broken, he accepts reality with grace.
The paintings romanticize the tree lined blocks of Brooklyn brownstones fifty summers ago, when kids played stickball in the street, and neighbors like Willy and Abe could walk to Temple, or to the corner lot to play baseball. This book is a gem, highly recommended for secular and Jewish schools and all public libraries. It is an excellent example of both an intergenerational and a multi-cultural picture book at its best.
For ages 6-10, and a grandparent.
Reviewed by Naomi Morse

A 2007 Association of Jewish Libraries Notable Book for Younger Readers5
Abe is a Jewish boy whose grandfather wants him to play the violin like Jascha Heifetz. Willie is an African-American boy whose father wants him to play baseball like Satchel Paige. The boys enjoy a secret friendship at night across the alleyway between their bedroom windows but it turns out that they are both more successful when they switch hobbies. When their secret is discovered, it is Willie who performs in the recital at the synagogue and Abe who takes the pitching mound at the baseball game. This lovely story of friendship in post-World War II Brooklyn, New York is complemented by the beautiful illustrations by Caldecott and Coretta Scott King award winner, E.B. Lewis.

A white kid and a black kid become best of friends and playmates.4

The book is well-written and the illustrations (watercolor images) are good, too. The text works well with the images, but I couldn't really follow the story by just looking at the pictures. There are 17 scenes in this book, some of which are two pages wide.

The story is about a white kid and a black kid that live across an alley from each other. One kid has a grandfather who is skilled with a violin and the other kid has a father who is good with a baseball. Each kid teaches the other to excel in the skill their relative has taught them. In the beginning of the story the boys have to be friends in secret because the neighborhood did not believe in the mixing of races. But by the end of the story the boys are able to be best of friends so all could see. What a nice ending!

I think some kids will like this book a lot. But I think some kids will misunderstand it. I'm curious why the author makes it an issue that the white kid was Jewish. He never mentioned the black kid's faith. Were the kids supposed to stay apart because they had different religions or because their skin color was different? I would have liked the book better if it had left religion out of the story. 4 stars!