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Travels with Louis

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

"When Louis was home in Queens, neighborhood kids would gather around as he brought them into jazz. His music still vibrantly lives around the world, and his spirit of humaneness lives in Travels with Louis by Mick Carlon, teacher of jazz to the young of all ages."—Nat Hentoff

"Thanks to his friendship with the great Louis Armstrong, twelve-year old Fred sees his world expand from ice cream and baseball in Queens to jazz at the Village Vanguard, a civil rights sit-in in Nashville, and ecstatic concerts in London and Paris. A wonderful story, which rings true on many levels."—Michael Cogswell, director, Louis Armstrong House Museum

"Carlon is driven by a love divided evenly between the subject and the act of writing itself."—Brian Morton, author of The Penguin Guide to Jazz

Praise for Mick Carlon's Riding on Duke's Train:

"In schools where students are lucky enough to experience classroom jazz studies, this title, combining rich musical history and a 'you are there' approach, is a natural."—Kirkus Reviews

"Enthralling. . . . An adventure story with a smart, historical framework."—ForeWord, Recommended Books for Kids

"A ripping good yarn."—Brian Morton

Queens, 1959. Twelve-year-old Fred loves reading, baseball, and playing trumpet with his neighbor, Louis Armstrong. Fred accompanies Louis to Nashville, where he encounters a Civil Rights lunch counter strike, and to London and Paris. Characters include Langston Hughes, Dizzy Gillespie, and Duke Ellington. Says jazz photographer Jack Bradley, "Reading this book is like visiting my friend again. This is the way he was, folks."

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    • School Library Journal

      November 1, 2012

      Gr 5-9-As with Carlon's Riding on Duke's Train (Leapfrog Press, 2011), this novel is based on the life of a legendary American musician. It imagines a young boy, 12-year-old Fred, who is both a friend and student of Louis Armstrong. In late 1950s Queens, New York, Freddie and his father struggle to come to terms with the untimely death of the boy's mother. Fred and Louis have a special relationship; the great trumpeter dotes on the boy who resembles his grandfather, a talented musician who squandered his gift because he was an alcoholic. The novel tries to incorporate a lot into the narrative: the boy's first experience with racism; puberty; his father's forays into dating after his wife's death; peer relations. These scenarios often feel contrived and almost unbelievable (Freddie stumbles onto a Civil Rights march and is immediately arrested), while the language sometimes veers into caricature, especially when Armstrong speaks. While Carlon tries to throw a few curves into the story line, it still wraps up neatly and predictably. Although this novel fails to deliver an engaging story, it might encourage readers to explore Armstrong's life through other books. Suggested only for deeper collections in need of historical fiction.Carol Fazioli, Barth Elementary School, Pottstown, PA

      Copyright 2012 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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