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Six kids. One mascot. Who wins?
In Rye, Virginia, just outside Washington, DC, people work hard, kids go to school, and football is big on Friday nights. An eighth-grade English teacher creates an assignment for her class to debate whether Rye’s mascot should stay or change. Now six middle-schoolers—all with different backgrounds and beliefs—get involved in a contentious issue that already has the suburb turned upside down with everyone choosing sides and arguments getting ugly.
Told from several perspectives, readers see how each student comes to new understandings about identity, tradition, and what it means to stand up for real change.
★ "A brilliant story not to be missed; deeply engaging from the first page."
—Kirkus Reviews, starred review
★ ". . . a well-rounded discussion about classism and racism, as well as effective allyship, with compassion and understanding." —Publishers Weekly, starred review
Charles Waters is a children’s poet, actor, educator, and coauthor (with Irene Latham) of African Town, winner of the 2023 Scott O’Dell Award for Historical Fiction; Dictionary for a Better World: Poems, Quotes, and Anecdotes from A to Z; and the award-winning Can I Touch Your Hair? Poems of Race, Mistakes and Friendship. He lives near Atlanta.
Best-selling author and Cherokee Nation citizen Traci Sorell writes inclusive, award-winning fiction and nonfiction in a variety of formats for young people. She is a two-time Sibert Medal and Orbis Pictus honoree for her nonfiction work. Her first five books have received awards from the American Indian Library Association.