They stared.
Silence, until Willie gurgled.
Dreenie’s mouth fell open. She screeched; she and Tuli screamed. And laughed! Peals of laughter.
Willie spun around and around. “Oh, muh goodness!” she said.
“Bluish!” Tuli said.
“No! No! Reddish!” Dreenie hollered.
They jumped up and down. “You have hair!” Dreenie shouted. It had to be the shortest copper-red hair anybody’d ever seen.
“Looks just like peach fuzz,” Willie said.
“No, it’s shiny, and curlier than fuzz. It’s gonna be ringlets. It’s cute!” Dreenie said. “Bluish!”
“No, Reddish!” They all yelled it at once. And the color of a new penny. Hollering and laughing, until Dreenie’s mom knocked and opened the door, to see what in the world was going on.
JOURNAL
A Record Of Bluish—It’s A New Year
NOBODY KNOWS ABOUT THIS journal but me. I write in it when Willie’s watching her TV shows. I hide it in my drawer that locks.
I guess I always meant to give it to you. Only I didn’t know till now. See, because the only way it’s right to have it and still be friends is if you own it.
This journal never was about me. This record of Bluish is YOURS. I’m giving it over to you to keep or throw away. A record from the very first time I saw you. I didn’t mean this to be bad. Not for you to be real mad at me—I hope not. We walk right in to the New Year—Dreanne and Natalie. GFF. Good Friends Forever.
And you don’t know it yet, but I got something special for Christmas. Only, after Christmas. My dad said he would get me one big special gift! He knew what I wanted. But I didn’t get it for Christmas. I was so sad! But I never said a word to him that I didn’t get it.
But I did! I did! On New Year’s Eve I got home from Tuli’s after school. We went and got her nightclothes and stuff. Tuli had to spend the night to watch Times Square. She just wouldn’t take no! I should have called you, but I didn’t know she was coming. We go to my room. And guess what? GUESS! You can’t!
A DOG! A real little PUPPY! All mine! Not Willie’s. Not anybody else’s. You and me can walk our dogs when it’s summer. Pretty dark brown with kind of white patches. Spaniel, they call it. It’s a girl! She has her own bed.
I get to run home at lunch and pet her and feed her, Mommy says. Daddy says we have to train her. Will you help me?
Right now Poochie is asleep on my lap. Little sweet Poochie. You like that name? I think it’s nice. Here comes Willie to bother me.
So this is it. I signed my name, see? Dreenie.
End of journal.
I’ll bring it over.
I hope we can still be friends.
I have another one to write. This one has to start out earlier. Guess who? Hint—Movie Star. Leather. …
Then I’ll do mine.
A Biography of Virginia Hamilton
Virginia Hamilton (1934–2002) was the author of forty-one books for young readers and their older allies, including M.C. Higgins, the Great, which won the National Book Award, the Newbery Medal, and the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award, three of the most prestigious awards in youth literature. Hamilton’s many successful titles earned her numerous other awards, including the international Hans Christian Andersen Award, which honors authors who have made exceptional contributions to children’s literature, the Coretta Scott King Award, and a MacArthur Fellowship, or “Genius Award.”
Virginia Esther Hamilton was born in 1934 outside the college town of Yellow Springs, Ohio. She was the youngest of five children born to Kenneth James and Etta Belle Perry Hamilton. Her grandfather on her mother’s side, a man named Levi Perry, had been brought to the area as an infant probably through the Underground Railroad shortly before the Civil War. Hamilton grew up amid a large extended family in picturesque farmlands and forests. She loved her home and would end up spending much of her adult life in the area.
Hamilton excelled as a student and graduated at the top of her high school class, winning a full scholarship to Antioch College in Yellow Springs. Hamilton transferred to Ohio State University in nearby Columbus, Ohio, in order to study literature and creative writing. In 1958, she moved to New York City in hopes of publishing her fiction. During her early years in New York, she supported herself with jobs as an accountant, a museum receptionist, and even a nightclub singer. She took additional writing courses at the New School for Social Research and continued to meet other writers, including the poet Arnold Adoff, whom she married in 1960. The couple had two children, daughter Leigh in 1963 and son Jaime in 1967. In 1969, the family moved to Yellow Springs and built a new home on the old Perry-Hamilton farm. Here, Virginia and Arnold were able to devote more time to writing books.
Hamilton’s first published novel, Zeely, was published in 1967. Zeely was an instant success, winning a Nancy Bloch Award and earning recognition as an American Library Association Notable Children’s Book. After returning to Yellow Springs with her young family, Hamilton began to write and publish a book nearly every year. Though most of her writing targeted young adults or children, she experimented in a wide range of styles and genres. Her second book, The House of Dies Drear (1968), is a haunting mystery that won the Edgar Allan Poe Award. The Planet of Junior Brown (1971) and Sweet Whispers, Brother Rush (1982) rely on elements of fantasy and science fiction. Many of her titles focus on the importance of family, including M.C. Higgins, the Great (1974) and Cousins (1990). Much of Hamilton’s work explores African American history, such as her fictionalized account Anthony Burns: The Defeat and Triumph of a Fugitive Slave (1988).
Hamilton passed away in 2002 after a long battle with breast cancer. She is survived by her husband Arnold Adoff and their two children.
For further information, please visit Hamilton’s updated and comprehensive website: www.virginiahamilton.com
A twelve-year-old Hamilton in 1948, when she was in the seventh grade.
Hamilton at a New York City club while she was a student at Antioch College in the mid-1950s. She often performed as a folk and jazz vocalist in clubs and larger venues.
Hamilton with her brothers, Buster and Bill, and sisters, Barbara and Nina, around 1954.
Hamilton’s head shots. The first was taken while she was a teenager in the early 1950s. The second was taken in her New York City apartment in the late 1960s, before she and Adoff built their house in Yellow Springs.
Hamilton outside of her first New York City apartment, which she shared with Adoff, around 1960. The couple moved to a below-street-level single room on Jane Street and, Adoff says, “thought we were such hot stuff, living in the Village and taking our places in that wonderful and long line of writers banging their heads against the wall . . . but in style.”
Adoff and Hamilton in Gibraltar in 1960, after a hard day of shopping and climbing the rock seen in the photo. As Adoff recalls, “This was the first time I convinced Virginia to sell everything but the books and leave America forever. It was also our delayed honeymoon. We made our way from Bremen to Paris to Málaga to a residency in Torremolinos, Spain, where we worked on our manuscripts and took side trips. This was one of them.”
Taken in 1965 in Argelès-plage, France, this photo shows the building where Hamilton and Adoff rented an apartment during what Adoff calls their “second time leaving America forever . . .”
Hamilton, Jaime, and Leigh at a reception at the Yellow Springs Public Library in 1975 after she received the Newbery Medal.
Hamilton at the publication party for Jaguarundi. She attended hundreds of conferences and book signings at schools and libraries around the country as each of her books was published.
Hamilton, Adoff, Leigh, and Jaime at Leigh’s wedding in Berlin in 2001.
Hamilton on Thanksgiving in 2001. This photo was taken by her niece, Nina Rios, a professional photographer, after Hamilton’s last round of chemotherapy, only a few months before her death.
All photos © 2011 by the Arnold Adoff Revoc
able Living Trust. Used by permission. Portrait courtesy of Jimmy Byrge.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. By payment of the required fees, you have been granted the non-exclusive, non-transferable right to access and read the text of this ebook onscreen. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, decompiled, reverse engineered, or stored in or introduced into any information storage and retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the express written permission of the publisher.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
copyright © 1999 by Virginia Hamilton
cover design by Connie Gabbert
978-1-4532-4671-9
This edition published in 2011 by Open Road Integrated Media
180 Varick Street
New York, NY 10014
www.openroadmedia.com
EBOOKS BY VIRGINIA HAMILTON
FROM OPEN ROAD MEDIA
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