Warriors Don't Cry: A Searing Memoir of the Battle to Integrate Little Rock's Central High
Written by Melba Pattillo Beals
Narrated by Lisa Renee Pitts
4/5
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About this audiobook
Melba Pattillo Beals
Melba Pattillo Beals is the author of the bestselling WARRIORS DON’T CRY: A SEARING MEMOIR OF THE BATTLE TO INTEGRATE LITTLE ROCK’S CENTRAL HIGH and the recipient of the 1995 American Library Association Nonfiction Book of the Year award and the prestigious Robert F. Kennedy Book Award. Dr. Beals was given a Congressional Gold Medal for her role, as a fifteen-year-old, in the integration of Central High School, Little Rock, Arkansas.
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Reviews for Warriors Don't Cry
181 ratings19 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Amazing. I have no words to describe how amazing this book is. You need to pick up and read it to experience it.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Honest and straight-forward, Melba doesn't pull any punches when telling her story. I am glad she became a journalist and could share her role in history without the filter of other people. Fascinating and highly recommended.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5In 1954 The Supreme Court Ruling Brown v. Board of Education made it law that non white people were indeed equal in ability to attend public school. Melba Patillo Turned sixteen in 1957. She and eight others were the first to test the Supreme court ruling.They did so at the very expense of their lives. When they carefully walked up the steps of Little Rock Central High School. With the assistance of military guards who were not on the side of the Lille Rock Nine, but they had a job to do.The year began and ended in hell. Melba was taunted and called "nigger" many times every day. She was told she stank. She was spit upon. Someone threw acid at her face. There always was the threat of a rope that the students told her would fit around her neck.All to soon the nine black students realized they truly were alone. When reports of the terror they experienced, they were told to not make a big deal of it!Page after page, Melba tells of the daily horror. They were not wanted, and they were going to pay for their upittyness!
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5After a tour of Central High School in Little Rock, I was inspired to pick up this book. I read the Young Readers Edition. I don't know how the Little Rock nine made it through the year. To take on that mantle in the face of such determined hatred and harassment and find the strength to go to school day after day during the 1957-1958 school year, it's amazing.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Brilliant. I literally stayed up all night reading it.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5this is a painful read about the 1957 Little Rock, Arkasas Central High School integration. I cannot imagine some of the things that she endured. I was disgusted that she wasn't protected by the teachers.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This book was absolutely searing and I was devastated after reading it.
The systematic, constant harassment, vile comments and behaviour these young people had to put up with during their school year was horrifying and their bravery in sticking it out was incredible. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a very good book. I would recommend this to anyone that is interested in the 1950's and the time when schools were being integrated. It has a very different style than any other author. The author is very descriptive in her writing. I would recommend this book for anyone!
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I read this book this last month because I wanted to be better able to help my tutoring students at Lusher with their compare and contrast essay. Students compared and contrasted Elie Wiesel, author of Night, and Melba Beals' struggle and challenges with faith, freedom, oppression, and basic human rights. I found this book to be insightful and well-written. Although Ms. Beals' struggle was quite different from what was experienced by Elie Wiesel, both novels explore similar themes of oppression, violence, civil and human rights, the belief in God, and finding strength in family and community. The Lusher students read these novels over the summer and, after many reviews and drafts, completed their final draft at the end of October. I would consider teaching a similar lesson in my future classroom, as it is the perfect opportunity to bridge two separate histories of people who struggle to find inner peace and freedom. Of course, the nature of their struggle is completely different, clear lines of theme, motif and symbolism run parallel in both novels.I had never heard of Melba Beals, as Ruby Bridges was always portrayed as the poster child for school integration. The Little Rock Nine, I remember, was taught as a unit and little was discussed on the individual student's experiences. I think that this book is easy for students to relate to because of Melba Beals' age at the time and the setting of the South. I would keep this book on my shelves and encourage students to read this powerful memoir.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Melba Beals first-hand account of her first year at all-white Central High School in Little Rock is compelling drama. The emotional and physical abuse continued all year --a surprise to this reader who was only familiar with the archetypal first-day photographs. With a plucky combination of resolve and faith, Melba faced a year that saw her social life dissolve, her privacy vanish, and her very being challenged. She is the ultimate hero of this book but as can be expected from such a dramatic story there are other heroes: her grandmother, "Linc" -- a white student who literally saves Melba's life due to his love for his black nanny. There are many more villains: AZ Governor Faubus, The CHS teachers -- who almost uniformly turned a blind eye to the abuse-- and "Andy" who is pathologically bent on harming Melba. Matter-of-fact reporting alternate with Melba's diary entries to make the days come alive. In a perfect world, one would have wished for better writing but no one can argue with the book's immediacy and importance. Religious content might ruffle secular feathers and frequent use of the n-word (in addition to unrelenting violence) might disturb others; otherwise, nothing objectionable.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Melba Pattillo Beals was one of the nine black teenagers who integrated Little Rock’s Central High School in 1957. A story of courage and determination, Melba recounts the harassment she and the other eight teenagers suffered. Despite the racism of the time, numerous white and black individuals stepped forward to help and warn her about pre-planned attacks. This book is written in an engaging manner that keeps the reader interested. Melba’s courage and quiet dignity can be used as an example for any teenager.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5On Wednesday, September 4, 1957, nine young African American teens attempted to attend the all-white high school in Little Rock Arkansas. Melba Pattillo, a sweet, smart 15-year old girl was among them. She and her mother didn’t make it to the school that day. They were attacked by a raging mob of hateful segregationists who refused to allow Negros into their schools. When Melba went home and wept into her pillow that day, her grandmother told her “…Make this your last cry. You’re a warrior on the battlefield for your Lord. God’s warriors don’t cry.”In her memoir, Warriors Don’t Cry, Melba Pattillo Beals describes the long hard battle she experienced during her junior year at Central High. It took an order from the President and the Screaming Eagles from the 101st Airborne to get the students into the school and protect them. Melba was spit upon, cursed, cornered and kicked. She faced death threats and knives. Danny, her guard, taught her to deal with it like a soldier. Her grandmother, India, taught her to deal with it like God’s soldier.Warriors Don’t Cry gives us both the personal and political perspective of these pivotal events in civil rights. We hear the voice of Melba the teen as well as the adult voice of the professional journalist she would later become. The writing is straight-forward and often intense. This is an excellent read for students in middle school or older. The organization Facing History and Ourselves offers a reader’s guide.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This is a haunting and insightful look at a journey taken by a young girl for the sake of so many people. Her struggles and pain, along with that of the other Little Rock Nine, are events that should always be remembered to show us how inhumaine humanity can be! This is a great companion read to go along with To Kill a Mockingbird to help see the struggles of Tom and the people of the Quarters in the eyes of some real history.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5True to Beals's title, Warriors Don't Cry is a "searing memoir of the battle to integrate." Every day was a struggle. Civil rights were hardly observed in a civil manner. Utter hatred spawned uncontrolled violence. For Melba Beals this hatred was not something she read about or glanced at on the television. She live it in every step she took. She experienced it first hand simply because of the color of her skin. How brave of her to write it all down! How lucky for us she decided to remember it all! Warriors Don't Cry is not an eye-opener. We have seen these things all along. Her memoir keeps it all in view.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5In 1957, Melba Patillo is one of nine black teenagers who attempts to integrate Central High in Little Rock, Arkansas. This story details her harrowing experiences in the battle for civil rights. What is most remarkable about this book is the narrator's voice. The events of the book are so traumatic, but the narrative style is more like journalistic reporting than emotionally fraught personal memoir. This point of view gives immediacy to events and puts the reader in the young character’s shoes. However, the restraint makes the book more powerful because it makes the conflicts more authoritative. In this way, the main character in the book, Melba Beals, reveals much about herself by what she chooses not to say. High school students who are struggling with bullying could take comfort from the strength of this book's author.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is heartbreaking, as it details the grinding tale of the ongoing abuse the author struggled with as one of the 9 black children who were at the forefront of integrating Little Rock. The failure of authority figures (police, school teachers and officials) who ignored, or worse, encouraged the physical and verbal abuse is stomach turning. After a few months, it sounds like all of the kids were suffering from PTSD. Imagine going to school and only feeling safe if there was a soldier next to you. Imagine not being able to go to the bathroom because girls would light paper on fire and drop it on you. In PE, their clothes were stolen and groups of kids would keep them under the shower as they turned it up to scalding.The families of the children were also threatened, lost jobs, etc. All but one child finished out the school year.It's a reminder that heroism often isn't a single moment of glory, but often a long, lonely path that requires persistence and unshakable conviction.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A moving and searing memoir of what it was like to be one of the "Little Rock Nine". Highly highly recommended. Something everyone should read to understand the reality of the civil rights movement.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5Mesmerizing account of the integration of Little Rock's public high school in the 1950's. The writer was one of the few students who were the first blacks to enter the school.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5A heartbreaking book full of the sinfulness of man, and yet alive with the hope of faith in God. Only Jesus will be able to heal hearts and the wounds suffered through bigotry and hatred. Please Lord, never let me add this kind of suffering to any soul.