

Everything seemed so half-hearted and churned out and formulaic. Also, the only way to show mock anger is to plant one balled fist on one out-thrust hip. EVERYTIME a character made a joke or said anything remotely funny/sarcastic/etc., Jenkins would write "s/he cracked." Apparently the only way to tell a joke is to crack. So many of the sentences were set up the same way, with minor details changed: a fill-in-the-blank book. It felt at times like I was reading a literature Mad Lib. Everything is done fairly shallowly, and though it may help some students connect to the time a bit, there are much more worthwhile reads out there that work in the facts unobtrusively and realistically instead of resting them on the surface. It really seems as if Jenkins took a history lesson from a text book and put names to it. firsts, etc), but the way they are worked into the story is fairly lazy.

It is (heavily) peppered with facts from the era (Fugitive Slave Act of 1850, Frederick Douglass' Paper, various Af. Basically, there is only one circumstance that would make this book worth while to read, and that is as an American history companion in a 5th or 6th grade class. Belle and the Beau is part of a series of books (Avon True Romance) written by multiple authors, and reads as the hack job it most likely is.

Belle must learn to adjust to free life and the idea that she can make her own choices and pursue her own goals. Republished under the name Belle, Belle and the Beau tells the story of Belle Palmer, an escaped slave who is taken in by a family of free blacks - the Bests - in Michigan.
