G. Neri is the author of the new children's picture book My Bicentennial Summer. His other books include My Antarctica. He lives on the Gulf Coast of Florida.
Q: Why did you decide to write My Bicentennial Summer?
A: A few years ago, I came across some Polaroids I had taken on this trip, along with some souvenirs. It got me thinking: was it really as big a trip as I vaguely remembered it?
I started looking into it, trying to recreate our route and when things happened. And the more I laid it out, the more I started remembering.
And then I realized it was not only the makings for a great book, but a great vehicle to talk about the promise of America and what it means to be an American. That’s what the Bicentennial is all about. And what perfect timing to release in during our nation’s 250th birthday!
Q: What do you think Corban Wilkin’s illustrations, and the combination of graphics and old photos, add to the book?
A: Like its predecessor, My Antarctica, the combination of photos and drawings gives it a kind of scrapbook/travelogue feeling. In many ways, it helped me explore this country the way I explored Antarctica: from the curiosity of a kid.
Initially, it was hard to write about myself but seeing young me as a cartoon character really helped me think of it as an epic story of a family road trip…that just happened to be me! Plus Corban really captured our family dynamics at the time.
Q: The Kirkus Review of the book calls it an “indelible family adventure exploring all things American—the good, bad, and ugly.” What do you think of that description, and how did you try to balance the “good, bad, and ugly” in the book?
A: When you’re a kid who’s never been anywhere but California, everything outside of that is a shock, either in a surprising way (accents, food) or an amazing way (national parks and monuments) or a kind of bad way (tornados, bears, war). I think it’s an apt description of the journey.
What I love most is that as a kid, I get to ask some very simple but profound questions: How did the Grand Canyon get so big? Why did they kill president Kennedy? Was Billy the Kid real? Why was there a civil war? Can we take a raft down the Mississippi like Huck Finn? Who wrote the Declaration of Independence? If all men are created equal, what about women? Or Black people? Or Native Americans? If you threw a penny off the Empire State Building, what would happen? How come people talk different in the South and the East? What is a crawdaddy? Best schooling I ever got.
Q: How would you compare the U.S. of 1976 with that of today?
A: Back then, we were coming out of a down period of the country: Vietnam, Watergate, the end of the moon landings. So the Bicentennial was about reclaiming the ideals of America as seen in the eyes of the Founders. It was a huge celebration and restored some national pride, however misplaced.
Now is similar: the loss of human rights, equality and the destruction of many of the major foundations of this country, has rocked people’s lives. But like the revolution, we are rising up to defend democracy. Just in time for our 250th birthday!
Q: What are you working on now?
A: I’ve just finished two huge books that have been many years in the making: We Are All Apollo about the Black history of the space program and how it affected our quest for equal rights, and Black Chrysalis, my first foray into horror-fantasy epic storytelling. Both have been incredible journeys into the unknown.
Q: Anything else we should know?
A: Making this book has helped restore my faith in people and how our differences is what really binds us together as well. We are a nation of immigrants and different cultures and that’s what makes us unique. Our divisions are manufactured by outside forces looking to divide us.
But I still think we are more united than we realize, once you start exploring the country in person. I’ve traveled to 48 of our 50 states and met amazing people across the board. We the People is a real thing once you get out there on the road.
--Interview with Deborah Kalb. Here's a previous Q&A with G. Neri.













