M.C. Higgins, the Great Introduction

Isolated mountain boy meets girl, loses girl, and decides to stay on the mountain. If you want the crux of M.C. Higgins, the Great, well, that's about it.

But that doesn't nearly scratch the surface of what goes on in our main man M.C.'s head throughout Virginia Hamilton's 1974 book. You'll be tempted to view the story as a boy-grows-up narrative, and it is that. But because M.C. already has so much independence and responsibility at the beginning of the book (he's got a bunch of younger siblings to look after while his parents work all day), the story reads more like an in-depth look at what a mature teenaged boy worries and thinks about.

And what does he worry about? Hint: survival, family, friendship. That girl. Oh—and legacy.

Why legacy? Because M.C.'s real struggle has to do with his place on the family mountain. Yep, you read right: His family owns a mountain, the mountain his ancestors fled to in order to escape slavery a few generations back.

Only the Higgins aren't the only ones on the mountain anymore, and strip-mining companies are turning the mountain into an environmental nightmare. So even though you can classify this book as a teen romance or a boy-meets-world story, it's really all about a boy and his relationship with—no, scratch that—his commitment to a mountain.

So throw on some hiking boots and pack some granola because it's time to commune with Nature, big-time. Need a little boost to get you going? M.C. Higgins, the Great earned Hamilton the John Newbery Medal, making her the first African American person to receive this honor, and it's also the only book to ever win the Newbery Medal, the Boston Globe-Horn Book Award, and the National Book Award (source). Now get a move on.

 

What is M.C. Higgins, the Great About and Why Should I Care?

Psst… Come here. We've got a secret to tell you: We aren't perfect. And you know what? Sometimes we really hate it when people point this out to us. Like, simmer down already and just leave us alone with our awesome selves, okay?

But you know what else? After reading M.C. Higgins, the Great, we're not feeling so… er… great about this tactic. Because here's the thing: M.C. fancies himself pretty spectacular. And there are plenty of ways in which he's right—the kid's got all kinds of nature skills and sixth senses and the like, plus he basically runs the show on the home front, taking care of his siblings while his parents work away.

But M.C.'s also kind of a jerk. He likes his best friends meek, his lady crushes to let him do whatever he wants with them, and he thinks his super nice neighbors are just too weird to show kindness toward. In other words, for all the ways in which M.C. knows he's the shmoop, well, we get to see that he isn't.

So we're trying a different tack, and the next time someone tries to tell us that maybe that thing we just did or those words we just said actually aren't so awesome, instead of deciding they're wrong, we're going to think for at least a little on whether they just might be right. After all, once M.C. lets other influence him, he pretty much saves the day.