Synopses & Reviews
< center=""> < p=""> I saved my brother from the soldiers, < br=""> but the princess says he is hers now.< br=""> Abba and Ima will never trust me again. <> < enter=""> < p=""> In ancient Egypt, there lives a girl named Almah who will do anything to ensure the safety of her baby brother, Mosis. <> < p=""> She will leave her enslaved family and assume the role of Egyptian princess. She will change her identity if it means winning health and freedom for her brother. <> < p=""> Mosis, however, does not feel completely free. His identity has been changed against his will, and he longs to find himself. And when he does, he will do anything in his power to see that justice is served. <>
Synopsis
I saved my brother from the soldiers, but the princess says he is hers now. Abba and Ima will never trust me again.
Over three thousand years ago in ancient Egypt, there lived a girl, Almah, who adored her baby brother, Mosis. She would do virtually anything to ensure his safety and happiness, even if it meant shunning their birthparents
but now Mosis will not be satisfied until he knows who he truly is.Award-winning author Julius Lester imagines Mosis as a brother, a son, an adoptee, and ultimately, as a young man who must make sense of his own unique identity.
Synopsis
I saved my brother from the soldiers,
but the princess says he is hers now.
Abba and Ima will never trust me again.
In ancient Egypt, there lives a girl named Almah who will do anything to ensure the safety of her baby brother, Mosis.
She will leave her enslaved family and assume the role of Egyptian princess. She will change her identity if it means winning health and freedom for her brother.
Mosis, however, does not feel completely free. His identity has been changed against his will, and he longs to find himself. And when he does, he will do anything in his power to see that justice is served.
About the Author
Julius Lester is the author of the Newbery Honor Book To Be a Slave, the Caldecott Honor Book John Henry, the National Book Award finalist The Long Journey Home: Stories from Black History, and the Coretta Scott King Award winner Day of Tears. He is also a National Book Critics Circle nominee and a recipient of the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award. His most recent picture book, Let's Talk About Race, was named to the New York Public Library's "One Hundred Titles for Reading and Sharing." In addition to his critically acclaimed writing career, Mr. Lester has distinguished himself as a civil rights activist, musician, photographer, radio talk-show host, and professor. For thirty-two years he taught at the University of Massachusetts at Amherst. He lives in western Massachusetts.
Kids Q&A
Read the Kids' Q&A with Julius Lester