Friday, March 29, 2013

Dave the Potter by Laban Carrick Hill

Hill, L. C., & Collier, B. (2010). Dave the potter: Artist, poet, slave. New York: Little, Brown.

Dave the Potter is about a slave growing up two-hundred years ago.  He was a great artist, poet, and potter.   The book tells about the life that Dave lives as a slave, which is very different compared to other slaves.

Dave makes pots for his owners. The book goes through the steps of him making a pot. It mentions in the book that it is a mystery where he has learned to be a potter.    He would often leave the pots blank because he feared he would get in trouble if they caught him writing on them.

But sometimes, he would write a poem or the date on a pot he made.  At the end of the book, it shows Dave using a stick to write a poem on his pot.



I wonder where is all my relation
friendship to all- and, every nation
-August 16, 1857
 
The words in this book flow without having to be re-read, and are written in poem form in the middle of the page.
 
"The jar grew so large
Dave could no longer
wrap his strong arms around it.
If he climbed into the jar
and curled into a ball,
he would have been embraced."
 
This is one of the lines from a page in the book.  The author uses simple sentences so that the reader can understand how he makes his pots.
 
 
The author also uses a lot of similes so that the reader can understand exactly what Dave does and how it works.  My favorite simile in this book is where the author is comparing him shaping the pot to a magician.
 
"Like a magician
pulling a rabbit out of a hat,
Dave's hands, buried
in the mound mud,
pulled out the shape of a jar."
 
This book will help readers understand that slaves did more than just work out in the fields for their owners and that they were actual people.  This book is written with a lot of emotion and makes the reader relate to Dave, even though he lived in a different time and under different circumstances.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 

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