Slave Day is a young adult novel written by Rob Thomas. It is very contemporary, and made me feel as if I were back in high school. This book tells the story of a single day from the vantage point of seven different characters. The day is Slave Day, a wacky fund-raiser at a suburban high school near Austin, Texas, in which students can purchase a slave for the day.
The Slave Day tradition is deep rooted at Robert E. Lee High School, Keene Davenport, an African American student, protests against slave day and tries to start a walk out. However, while Keene gets his way, and ensures that this will be the last Slave Day ever, Keene's walk out effort is a failure. As the day unfolds, Keene's efforts to demonstrate the evil nature of Slave Day get out of hand, and Keene can no longer control it. Students on the football team drop out right before a game, to protest racist comments made by the head coach. .
While Keene's story seemed to be the main focus of the book, there were other concurrent stories viewed from the vantage points of other students. These stories are all interconnected, and demonstrate how labels such as "nerd" and "jock" are really superficial and subjective.
The overall lessons from this book are that young adult's can have a positive impact to promote justice and to shake complacency. The book teaches tolerance, yet sadly it portrays an accurate picture of high schools today, complete with de facto segregation. In the end, all of the characters go home at night and will return to school the next day. The reader is left hanging, and wondering how they can change or help heal racial issues in their high school.