“What could be better for a young boy than
to spend a whole day with his father! With
mom away on a Saturday, that’s exactly what
Kevin gets to do. First, he and his dad
clean the house together, and then it’s time
for some baseball and even a movie. Told in
Kevin’s words, this lovely picture book
evokes the excitement, pride, pleasure and
love a boy can experience with a father who
includes him in both the work and play of a
weekend day.”
With Father’s Day looming on the horizon,
I’m sure plenty of folks are
starting to think about buying a meaningful
gift for the man in their life. Well, any
dad with a young son would undoubtedly
appreciate this timeless classic, first
published a decade ago, by Irene Smalls, the
award-winning author of 15 children’s books
and 3 interactive storytelling CDs designed
with African-American youngsters in mind.
Over the years, Kevin and His
Dad has proven to be increasingly invaluable
given the frightening statistics reflecting
the deteriorating state of the black family.
Regardless of whose poll you believe, the
numbers are shocking, with anywhere from 70
to 90 per cent of black kids now being
raised by single-moms.
The situation is so dire that, a
year ago, even Barack Obama took a break
from the campaign trail to deliver his
controversial Father’s Day sermon back at a
church in Chicago during which he criticized
delinquent absentee-dads for “acting like
boys instead of men,” noting that “the
foundations of our families are weaker
because of it.” Shortly thereafter, however,
Jesse Jackson, Sr. was caught on an open
microphone stating that he wanted to cut-off
Obama’s [bleep] for “talking down to black
people.” [http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4aLGkFpsdHo]
The irony here is that, if anybody, Reverend
Jackson was the one who might stand to
benefit from having his manhood castrated.
After all, he had irresponsibly fathered an
out-of-wedlock love child, the result of an
extramarital affair with a young woman who
has since bitterly about how he’s failed in
his parental responsibilities. Go figure!