Book Descriptions
for Rich by Nikki Grimes and R. Gregory Christie
From Cooperative Children's Book Center (CCBC)
Third grader Dyamonde Daniel is always smart, usually confident, and sometimes sad since her parents divorced. She doesn’t miss her parents fighting, but she does miss other things since moving, including her old best friend. Make Way for Dyamonde Daniel introduces this dynamic girl who likes math but can’t stand the new boy at her school. Free is always grumpy, but when Dyamonde takes her teacher’s advice and asks him why, she discovers she’s not the only one dealing with unsettling changes in her life. In Rich , Dyamonde and Free, now the best of friends, get to know Damaris, a quiet girl in their class who doesn’t want anyone to know she and her family live in a shelter. Nikki Grimes’s energetic, upbeat new series features an African American protagonist who knows that even when someone faces big challenges, friendship and small acts of kindness make a difference. Number-loving Dyamonde, and Free and Damaris, who like words and poetry, are a delight. (Ages 6–9)
CCBC Choices 2010. © Cooperative Children's Book Center, Univ. of Wisconsin - Madison, 2010. Used with permission.
From the Publisher
The second book in the Dyamonde Daniels series, by bestselling author Nikki Grimes, is great for fans of the Keena Ford, Judy Moody, and Magnificent Mya Tibbs series and includes illustrations by Coretta Scott King honor winner R. Gregory Christie.
Dyamonde Daniel is excited about the local library's poetry contest, and so is her friend Free. The prize is one hundred dollars, and just think what they could buy with that much money! But when they find out that Damaris, one of their classmates, has been living in a homeless shelter, their ideas about what it means to be rich or poor start to change.
Dyamonde Daniel is excited about the local library's poetry contest, and so is her friend Free. The prize is one hundred dollars, and just think what they could buy with that much money! But when they find out that Damaris, one of their classmates, has been living in a homeless shelter, their ideas about what it means to be rich or poor start to change.
Publisher description retrieved from Google Books.