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This guide includes discussion questions intended to provoke thought and insight into the themes of the book which include baseball, violence, racism, boundaries, discrimination, and fame. To view a full color, printable, illustrated PDF version of this guide click here.
Discussion guide:
1. How does the author and illustrator weave the story of Emmet Wilson, a sharecropper, with the story of Satchel Paige? Why do you think they made this choice instead of a typical biography?
2. Why is Emmet Wilson willing to leave his home and family? Compare his opportunities at home during this time period to those he’ll have in the black baseball league.
3. Describe the narrator’s experience as an opponent to the famous Satchel Paige. What does the game reveal to the reader about both Paige and Wilson?
4. Explain why the narrator then returns to Tuckwilla, Alabama. As a reader, how do you know that time has passed in the story? What is Emmet’s main conflict now?
5. How do Dizzy Dean and Satchel Paige capitalize on their talents to make the most money? Despite this what is Paige still refused? How would you handle this kind of discrimination?
6. Why does Emmet feel compelled to attend Mr. Jennings’s celebration? What happens? Would you be able to bring yourself to attend?
7. By 1941 how has Satchel Paige’s career climbed? What does he say about himself? Why do you think the Jim Crow laws of the South persisted over such a long time period?
8. Emmet tries to “humble down” to the Jennings twins but they resort to violence to make their point. What do they do? Why is Emmet afraid to retaliate? How does this impact every single aspect of his life, even his faith?
9. Summarize the game between the famous Satchel Paige and the Tuckwilla, Alabama home team. What does watching this game do for the Wilson men?
10. How does the graphic novel format add to your understanding of the subjects presented? What have you learned about the institutions of sharecropping and the Jim Crow laws that you might have missed otherwise?
Panel discussion questions:
1. Are there still disparate wages among whites and African-Americans today? Why?
2. Do you think the African American newspapers were welcome below the Mason Dixon line or not? Why? How do most people communicate about important issues today?
3. What is the most interesting fact you learned about baseball from this story?
4. How did the police handle lynchings during this time period? How was this a form of terror and control?
Projects:
Language Arts/Art:
Create several graphic novel pages about an important sport, academic or social hero of your own. Be sure to research information about your subject’s life so that the panels educate and entertain.
Create a Venn diagram and compare and contrast the lives of Satchel Paige and Emmet Wilson.
History:
Research one of the following topics from the novel and develop a PowerPoint, website, or newspaper article about what you learned (cite at least three different sources, only two of which may be online):
- National Negro League
- African American Press
- History of American Baseball
- Barnstorming
- Railroad
- Brotherhood of Sleeping Car Porters
- Jim Crow laws
- Lynching
- Graphic novels
This guide was created by Tracie Vaughn Zimmer, a reading specialist and children’s author. Visit her website at www.tracievaughnzimmer.com to find hundreds of other guides to children’s and young adult literature. |