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Showing posts from September, 2020

"Look Both Ways: A Tale Told in Ten Blocks" by Jason Reynolds- Book Review

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Look Both Ways: A Tale Told in Ten Blocks by Jason Reynolds. Simon & Schuster. 2019. Jason Reynolds’ book Look Both Ways: A Tale Told in Ten Blocks is a collection of short stories told though the eyes of the many students who attend Latimer Middle School and take one of ten blocks to their home after school.  Take Marston ST. for example, here best friends TJ and Jasmine walk side by side talking about…well talking about boogers. Together they walk chatting about what it means to be a booger.  The Low Cuts: John John, Fancy, Trista, and Bit take Placer Street to Ms. Cece Cece’s house. There the kids use the change they stole that day to buy the best candy, then resell it in the nearby pool bar to multiply their investment. Sometimes they buy extra food in school with their earnings other days, like today, they buy ice cream for Bit’s mother to enjoy after her chemo treatment.   Pia Foster rides her skateboard on Bastion ST. where she is sopped by a group of boy...

"Speak" by Laurie Halse Anderson- Book Review

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Speak by Laurie Halse Anderson. Farrar, Straus, & Grioux. 1999. Thirteen-year-old Melinda Sordino could have never guessed that her life would be forever changed the night she attended an end-of-summer party with her best friend Rachel. Melinda cannot believe her luck, an upperclassman from her soon-to-be high school is flirting with her. Andy showers her in compliments and holds her like no one else ever has. Soon after, he takes Melinda away from the party and before Melinda knows what is happening, he is on top of her. Melinda tries to speak, get up, and fight back, but Andy is there with his hand over her mouth, his weight pinning her to the floor. Afterwards a confused and still intoxicated Melinda calls the police for help. She knows that is what you do when a crime has been committed. Her future classmates, including Rachel, can’t understand Melinda’s abrupt decision to call the police. Melinda can’t voice what Andy did to her, leaving her with one option, to speak as littl...

"Mexican Whiteboy" by Matt de la Peña- Book Review

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Mexican Whiteboy by Matt de la Peña. Ember. 2008 Mexican Whiteboy follows the summer of sixteen-year-old Danny Lopez. Born to a Mexican father and White mother, Danny has always struggled with his identity. He is constantly being told he is too dark skinned to be White but too well dressed, soft spoken, and mono-linguistic to be Mexican. Danny is given the option to follow his mother, her boyfriend, and his sister to San Francisco or live with his father’s family in National City, a suburb just outside of San Diego. Danny decides to take the leap and live in National City in hopes of getting to know more about his absentee father.  Once Danny arrives in National City, he joins his cousin Sofia and her neighborhood friends in a game of baseball. The neighborhood boys are shocked when Sofia’s soft-spoken cousin hits the ball farther then they thought possible. One of the boys, Uno, is less than impresses when Danny’s bat flies straight into the face of his bother. Danny thinks he ha...

"George" by Alex Gino- Book Review

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George by Alex Gino. Scholastic Corporation. 2015. When you are a kid it feels like you are constantly wanting. Wanting to be the smartest student in your class. Wanting to have the nicest clothes. Wanting to be invited to all the birthday parties. For George she wants one thing, to show everyone who she truly is, a girl. Alex Gino’s novel George details the heart wrenching story of a transgender girl as she struggles to come to terms with and share her sexual identity. George finds refuge in the pages of a teen girl magazine fantasizing about being one of them. But when she is constantly being belittled by her brother and her peers at school for being too feminine, George wonders if she will ever get to be who she is. That is until her teacher lets the class know they will be preforming a play from George’s favorite book, Charlotte’s Web . George finds an ally within her best friend Kelly, and together they concoct a plan to make two of George’s dreams come true, play Charlotte on st...

"Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood" by Marjane Satrapi- Book Review

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  Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood by Marjane Satrapi. Pantheon. 2003 Author Marjane Satrapi details her experiences growing up in Iran during the Islamic Revolution in the black and white graphic novel Persepolis: The Story of a Childhood . Throughout the novel we see a Marji, young Iranian girl grow up to be a levelheaded and outspoken young adult unafraid to stand up for what she believes in regardless of the repercussions. Marji’s story begins before the Islamic Revolution, she, like many other young girls dreams of what her life will be when becomes a woman. However, her dreams are to become a prophet and bring to light the word of God, a position that is only acceptable for a man. Marji’s dreams slowly sour as she begins to notice the disparities occurring in her own home. With the impending Islamic revolutionary war on the horizon Marji loses touch with what and who to believe in. Her mother and father explain to her the complexities of the incoming war, and Marji is no...

"El Deafo" by Cece Bell- Book Review

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  El Deafo by Cece Bell. Amulet Books. 2014 Imagine one day you are a just a girl singing your favorite songs, watching TV with your family, and exploring with your best friend when, seemingly out of nowhere, you become deaf. For Author Cece Bell this was not something she had to imagine this is exactly what happened to her. In her debut graphic novel, El Deafo , Cece Bell details some of the experiences she went through as a child after she contracted meningitis at the age of 4 and became deaf. In Bell’s novel the self-named main character Cece, has to navigate through all the challenges that come with growing up, while also trying to be her herself in a world that is all at once familiar and foreign.  Cece, like any young child, wants to have a noble friend who will be on her side at all times and simply accept her, hearing aid and all. However, as Cece grows up she quickly realized that being deaf comes with more than just the obvious obstacles. Everyone around her, from ...