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You Can Fly: The Tuskegee Airmen
You Can Fly: The Tuskegee Airmen
You Can Fly: The Tuskegee Airmen
Ebook85 pages39 minutes

You Can Fly: The Tuskegee Airmen

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In this “masterful, inspiring evocation of an era” (Kirkus Reviews, starred review), award-winning author Carole Boston Weatherford “wields the power of poetry to tell [the] gripping historical story” (Publishers Weekly, starred review) of the Tuskegee Airmen.

I WANT YOU! says the poster of Uncle Sam. But if you’re a young black man in 1940, he doesn’t want you in the cockpit of a war plane. Yet you are determined not to let that stop your dream of flying.

So when you hear of a civilian pilot training program at Tuskegee Institute, you leap at the chance. Soon you are learning engineering and mechanics, how to communicate in code, how to read a map. At last the day you’ve longed for is here: you are flying!

From training days in Alabama to combat on the front lines in Europe, this is the story of the Tuskegee Airmen, the groundbreaking African-American pilots of World War II. In vibrant second-person poems, Carole Boston Weatherford teams up for the first time with her son, artist Jeffery Weatherford, in a powerful and inspiring book that allows readers to fly, too.
LanguageEnglish
Release dateMay 3, 2016
ISBN9781481449403
You Can Fly: The Tuskegee Airmen
Author

Carole Boston Weatherford

Carole Boston Weatherford has written many award-winning books for children, including Kin, illustrated by her son Jeffery and a Coretta Scott King Author Honor recipient; Box, which won a Newbery Honor; Unspeakable, which won the Coretta Scott King Award, a Caldecott Honor, and was a finalist for the National Book Award; Respect: Aretha Franklin, the Queen of Soul, winner of the Coretta Scott King Illustrator Award; ALA Notable Children’s Book You Can Fly; and Caldecott Honor winners Freedom in Congo Square; Voice of Freedom: Fannie Lou Hamer, Spirit of the Civil Rights Movement; and Moses: When Harriet Tubman Led Her People to Freedom. Carole lives in North Carolina. Visit her at CBWeatherford.com. 

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    Book preview

    You Can Fly - Carole Boston Weatherford

    CONTENTS

    Head to the Sky

    The Civilian Pilot Training Program

    Train Ride to the Clouds

    A Shot

    The First Cadets

    Officers

    The Odds

    Keep ’Em Flying: Tuskegee Army Airfield Nurses

    Ground School

    Solo, At Last

    Sugar, Sugar

    The Other War

    Downtime

    Training Planes

    Pearl Harbor

    Dorie Miller Earns the Navy Cross

    Private Joe Louis

    Fighting Boredom

    Second Lieutenant

    William Henry Hastie

    The Double V Campaign: Pens Mighty as Swords

    Anxious

    Fight Song

    Facing the Enemy

    Operation Prove Them Wrong

    Routines

    Lena Horne: More than a Pin-Up

    Red Tail Angels

    The Black Birdmen

    Your Record

    No Hero’s Welcome

    A Long Line

    Epilogue

    Author’s Note

    Time Line

    Resources

    About Carole Boston Weatherford and Jeffery Boston Weatherford

    In memory of my father, Joseph A. Boston Jr., a World War II veteran.

    To all who fly in their dreams

    —C. B. W.

    To my mom, my dad, and my tribe

    —J. B. W.

    Head to the Sky

    No matter that there are only 130

    licensed black pilots in the whole nation.

    Your goal of being a pilot cannot be grounded

    by top brass claiming blacks are not fit to fly.

    Your vision of planes cannot be

    blocked by clouds of doubt.

    The engine of your ambition will not brake

    for walls of injustice—no matter how high.

    The sky’s no limit if you’ve flown

    on your own power in countless dreams;

    not if you’ve raised homing pigeons

    on Harlem rooftops;

    or watched crop dusters

    buzzing over rows of cotton;

    not if you’ve gazed at stars

    and known God meant for you to soar.

    The Civilian Pilot Training Program

    You see the posters: Uncle Sam Wants You.

    If only that meant in the cockpit.

    But the Civilian Pilot Training Program—

    the CPTP—is for whites only

    until the NAACP and black newspapers push

    Congress to fund programs at several black colleges—

    including Howard, Hampton, and Tuskegee—

    and at the Coffey

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