Little Rosetta and the Talking Guitar

by Charnelle Pinkney Barlow (Author)

Little Rosetta and the Talking Guitar
Reading Level: 2nd − 3rd Grade

A picture-book biography of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, the woman who invented rock and roll--a warm, inspiring tale of a childhood filled with music, community, and a drive to succeed.

"Music is the heart of our story," says Momma to young Rosetta, surprising her with her first guitar. Rosetta's strums sound like ker-plunks. But with practice and determination, she makes music, fingers hopping "like corn in a kettle," notes pouring over the church crowd "like summer rain washing the dust off a new day."

In this stunning picture book, author and illustrator Charnelle Pinkney Barlow imagines the childhood of Sister Rosetta Tharpe, whose rural roots inspired the music we still hear today.

Young readers will see a child's dream become reality through hard work and perseverance. And they'll learn the overlooked story of a pioneering Black artist, whose contribution to music history is only now being discovered.

Select format:
Hardcover
$18.99

Kirkus

Speaks to all children with music in their heads while introducing an unjustly little-known pioneer.

ALA/Booklist

[A] pitch-perfect picture-book biography. . . . This upbeat, harmonious portrait of the "Godmother of Rock and Roll" as a child hits all the right notes.

Publishers Weekly

Starred Review

The sounds of early 20th-century Cotton Plant, Ark., contribute to a child's musical innovations in this sensory early life portrait of Sister Rosetta Tharpe (1915-1973), godmother of rock and roll. When young Tharpe receives her first guitar, she resolves to create a story to tell at her church's anniversary. Inspired by the sounds of her African American community as she practices (a sewing machine's whirrrr, a rolling train's gruumm), the girl works "to match the town's song," growing more confident until, at the anniversary, "the notes poured over the crowd like summer rain." Final spreads note that as Tharpe's unconventional style revolutionized popular music, she would continue telling stories of "the joy and trials/ of those who came before her./ ... the story of her people" for more than 50 years as she traveled the globe. Framing the figure's musical stylings as an outgrowth of community and place, Pinkney Barlow smartly uses lively onomatopoeia and crisp, textured collage art to layer the origins of the subject's sound onto every page. An author's note concludes. Ages 3-7. (Feb.)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly, LLC Used with permission.

Review quotes

★ "Perhaps most impressive is the sense of place achieved by both text and art: Readers will truly feel as though they've visited Cotton Plant and met many of its animated, expressive denizens."BookPage, starred review

"Onomatopoeia brings a playful rhythm as "Little Rosetta" finds inspiration in everyday moments, and her journey from novice musician to fluent guitarist is relayed with authentic struggles and self-doubt." —The Bulletin

"'Little Rosetta' finds inspiration in everyday moments, and her journey from novice musician to fluent guitarist is relayed with authentic struggles and self-doubt."—The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books

Charnelle Pinkney Barlow
CHARNELLE PINKNEY BARLOW received her BFA in illustration from the University of the Arts, Philadelphia, and her MFA in the Illustration as Visual Essay program from the School of Visual Arts, New York. Charnelle's children's book illustrations include Everything in Its Place, The Real Santa, and Remember to Dream, Ebere. Charnelle lives in Indianapolis with her husband. When she's not drawing, she is baking, sewing, or reading with a cup of tea by her side. Find her online at callmechartreuse.com, and follow her on Instagram at @callmechartreuse.
Classification
Fiction
ISBN-13
9780593571064
Lexile Measure
-
Guided Reading Level
-
Publisher
Doubleday Books for Young Readers
Publication date
February 28, 2023
Series
-
BISAC categories
BIO000000 - Biography & Autobiography | General
Library of Congress categories
Picture books
United States
Blues musicians
Guitarists
Tharpe, Rosetta
Gospel musicians

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