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Track and field. Fiction.
Conduct of life. Fiction.
Family life. Fiction.
Pregnancy. Fiction.
Albinos and albinism. Fiction.
African Americans. Fiction.
Starred Review Lu is the man, the kid, the guy. The one and only. Not only was he a miracle baby but he is albino. He's special down to his gold chains and diamond earrings, but he feels a little less once-in-a-lifetime when his parents tell him they're pregnant again. On top of this sobering news, he's leading the Defenders alongside a cocaptain who isn't pleased about sharing the title; and he's training for the 110-meter hurdles, choking at every leap. As the championship approaches, can he prove his uniqueness one final time? As with the prior titles, the final installment in the four-book Track series is uplifting and moving, full of athletic energy and eye-level insight into the inner-city middle-school track-team experience. While it must be said that Lu has the least distinct voice of the four narrators d given that Reynolds has proven himself to be an absolute master of voice, that is disappointing is story is not a letdown. Virtually every subplot is a moving moral lesson on integrity, humility, or reconciliation, and Reynolds wraps up his powerful series with a surprising ending, all while scattering rewarding details about Ghost, Patina, and Sunny to let the reader truly revel in this multidimensional world as it comes to a close.
Horn BookWhile preparing for the track championship and competing in a new event--the hurdles--Defenders co-captain Lu, who has albinism, learns a secret about his father that could potentially upend their close relationship. Meanwhile, Lu also must face a nemesis from his past. Reynolds takes great care in crafting multidimensional characters who confront real dilemmas and demonstrate that our shortcomings do not ultimately define us.
Kirkus ReviewsA middle-grade runner soars over obstacles to shine as a leader for his team and family.In this final addition to Reynolds' Track series, the titular, self-described "fine-o albino" is nervous, maybe a little scared, about the many changes occurring during the week leading to the championships for the Defenders. An unexpected pregnancy announcement from his parents and the challenge of waltzing to a win in his new event, hurdles, among other things, keep Lu's emotions, and feet, racing. Reynolds' seamless integration of Lu's story into his series shows him to be a master of temporal structure, highlighting individual and collective growth of his four protagonists over one season. The circularity of his similes in describing the generations of teasing endured by Lu's father, who stuttered as a child ("You sound like a choking Chihuahua"), by Lu, bullied due to his albinism ("Yo, you look like a cotton ball dipped in white paint"), and even by a bully Lu takes down ("Yo, Kelvin, you smell like your blood ain't blood. It's trash juice pumping through your things") emphasizes the triumph of healing and unity in the book's surprising ending. New and returning characters help to create tension and smooth transitions, but Lu pulls ahead as the catalyst for much of the relational shifts between adults and kids, showcasing children's power to effect true communal change.The perfect anchor leg for a well-run literary relay. (Fiction. 10-14)
School Library JournalGr 5-8 Following on the heels of Ghost, Patina , and Sunny comes the last leg of Reynolds's middle grade quartet. Readers meet the co-captain of the Defenders, a lightning-quick athlete with bravado to spare. Lu was born with albinism and must take extra care to protect his skin and eyes. Every morning, he puts in his contacts, applies his sunscreen, and psychs himself up by reciting his mantra: "I am the man. The guy. The kid. The one. The only. The Lu. Lucky Lu. Lookie Lu. Lu the Lightning Bolt." Lu learns that he's about to become a big brother, and comes up against some literal and figurative hurdles on and off the track as he tries to lead his team to victory. His self-possession serves him in good stead as he confronts his father and convinces him to right a long overdue but not forgotten wrong. Lu realizes that he doesn't need gold chains and diamond earrings to be flashy, and, regardless of the odds or the competition, that he has what it takes to stand up and truly be "the man, the guy." Reynolds carefully delineates his characters' personalities and family dynamics to reflect where these kids are coming from before seeing them on the track or part of a team. He keeps the pace lively and strikes a perfect balance of sports action, middle school trash-talking, and slice-of-life modern family concerns. This book stands alone, but fans of the series will enjoy Lu's interactions with teammates introduced in earlier titles. Thanks to their coach, they have become conditioned athletes, but in coming together and working as a team they have developed the hearts of champions. VERDICT Reynolds sprints to the finish of this splendid sports series. Pure gold. Luann Toth, School Library Journal
1
MY NAME: Lightning
I am
The man.
The guy.
The kid.
The one.
The only.
The Lu. Lucky Lu. Or as I call myself, Lookie Lu. Or as my mom calls me, Lu the Lightning Bolt, because lightning so special it don't never happen the same way or at the same place twice. That's what she says. And I like the nickname, but I don't believe that. Don't believe lightning won't hit the same tree, or the same house, or the same person more than once. I think Mom might've missed on that one. I swear, sometimes she just be talking to be talking. Plus, how would she even know that? I mean, she know a lot of stuff about stuff because she's a mother and mothers gotta know stuff, but the people who went to school for that kind of thing, like weather people and meteorologists (who should be studying meteors and not weather), they don't even be knowing (because they should be studying meteors and not weather). Talking about it's a 50 percent chance it might rain. A little. A lot. Today. Or maybe tomorrow. I mean, come on. And I'm supposed to just believe lightning don't never strike the same place twice? Ever? Right.
You know who really made me know my mother was wrong? Ghost. One time he told me about this guy--name start with a R--who holds the world record for getting struck by lightning, not once, not twice, not three times, not FOUR times, not FIVE TIMES, NOT SIX TIMES, but . . . SEVEN TIMES! If I was Ray or Ron or whatever his name is (or was, because he gotta be dead), I would've stayed in the house after the second one. I mean, what was he thinking? Knowing him (I don't really know him, but I know people like him so that's basically the same thing), he was probably listening to a meteorologist. Or my mother, who by the way, when she says the thing about lightning striking, don't even be talking about real lightning. Like electric bolts in the sky? Nah. She just be talking about electric . . . moments . . . in life. And I, clearly, was the most electric-est moment in hers. One in seventeen thousand. Albino. Born with no melanin, which means born with no brown. And honestly, I wasn't supposed to be born at all, because my mom wasn't supposed to be able to have kids. So a two-time special once-in-a-lifetime thing.
Until yesterday.
It was Sunday dinner, which is the same as Monday, Tuesday, Wednesday, Thursday, Friday, and Saturday dinner except Mom always tries something new with the food. And this Sunday my dad, who normally works late, was there at the table with my mom to drop the new news on me.
"We're having another baby." They almost sang it out, like a song hook or something. Like they one-two-three'd it and everything.
"You for real?" That's all I could really get out--let out--but inside my head was going, Yo you serious like really for real real talk no jokes stop playing it ain't funny if you playing wait what nah can't be you really really r e a l l y for real?, stretching my neck trying to see my mother's stomach, even though she was sitting down. Dad was tucking his gold chains in his shirt--he always did that whenever he was eating--then popped me on the arm with the back of his hand. And when I looked at him, wondering what he did that for, he just shook his head real fast like he knew something I ain't know. Like he knew something I ain't want to find out. "Sorry," I yelped. "It's just . . . I can't even tell!"
I pinched and pulled a piece of meat from the turkey wing on my plate, a recipe my mom said she got from Patty's aunt. Tasted pretty good too, even though it seemed weird to just be eating turkey wings without the rest of the turkey. That's what chicken wings are for.
"We're very for real." Mom smiled. "We're just about at three months, and they're saying on December sixth you gon' have a little brother or sister." I swear her face was glowing like there were lightbulbs in her cheeks. "That's why I've been more tired than usual, and why I'm sometimes late picking you up at practice. Been a little sick during the day."
"Sick?"
"Yeah, nothing serious. Normal pregnancy stuff. But that part should be almost over." She crossed her fingers. "Oh, and . . . well . . . thank you for not being able to tell by looking at me. Trust me, I'll be poking out soon enough. Y'know, it took a while for you to make your presence known too."
"And the boy ain't stopped since," my dad threw in.
"Ain't that the truth." Mom pressed her shirt against her stomach just enough to show a bump no bigger than the kind you get after a Thanksgiving meal. Only difference is it wasn't Thanksgiving, even though . . . turkey. "Anyway, we're telling you now because tomorrow we have a doctor's appointment."
"I'm going?"
"I mean . . . well, we thought about it, but it's your championship week, you know?" She set her fork down. Folded her arms on the table. "You wanna go? Or would you rather go to practice?"
Tricky. I definitely wanted to go to the doctor to see what was going on with the baby, but not if they did what I thought they were going to do there.
"Depends. They going to do that thing with the . . ." I balled up my fist and slowly moved it over my stomach to demonstrate how they pull out that machine-thing that turns the baby into a blob of virtual reality with the heartbeat and all that. "And then the baby'll show up on the screen looking like old footage of the moon landing?" A blob of virtual reality or old-school TV, when TV was basically just radio with a screen.
Dad choked on his drink.
"A sonogram." My mother put a name to my brilliant description. "And when have you ever seen footage of the moon landing?"
"Ghost showed me." Well, really Ghost asked Patty to pull it up on her phone because he was trying to convince us that it never happened. He heard these dudes at the bus stop saying it was all fake. Patty said she got a friend whose dad is a rocket scientist (I ain't even know that was a real job!) and that she could prove the moon landing was real. And Sunny, well, he said he already knew it was real--the moon landing (and the moonwalk)--because he had been up there. To the moon. That's what he said. Too bad his discus ain't never go to the moon. Sunny couldn't get that thing to go far enough to land any place other than last place. A few weeks ago, at the first meet he ever threw at, he stepped over the line on the first two tries. Me, Patty, and Ghost started cheering for him. Like, just trying to make sure he ain't feel bad because he was looking pretty rough out there. Even his pops joined in with the encouragement. And then everybody started clapping and screaming Go Sunny, and Come on, Sunny, and You can do it, and all that kind of stuff. Even some people from the other teams. Sunny dropped back in his throwing position and started winding up. His face looked more intense than I'd ever seen it. Like a stone. He wound and wound and wound, then whipped into a spin, and right when he flung the discus, he let out a sound like . . . I don't even know. Like a . . . wail. Like a whale. It was wild. And the discus went maybe . . . ten feet? Maybe. I mean, the thing went nowhere. But he got it off without a foul. And was cheesing from ear to ear. We all were. He threw his hands up in the air, broke out in some kind of weird dance move and everything. Last place. But there were only three people competing, so good thing for him, last place was still . . . third place.
"So, yeah. They gon' sonogram the baby?" I went on.
"Yep, to make sure everything is beating and growing." My mother wiggled her fingers in the air, and even though I couldn't see her feet, I knew she was wiggling her toes, too.
"And you gon' find out if it's a boy?"
"Or . . . a girl," she corrected me.
"Right. Or a girl."
Mom looked at Dad. Then back at me. Nodded, smiling. That was a yes.
"Well, then I'm going to practice."
"Why?" My mother looked shocked, like I said I was going to the moon or something.
"So that y'all can come home and surprise me!"
I love surprises. Always have. My folks used to give me surprise birthday parties every year when I was younger, and even though I was never really surprised--because they did it every year--I was still happy they did it, until I asked them to just start surprising me with sneakers for my birthday, so then I could surprise the world. My father be surprising my mom all the time with flowers and husband-wife stuff, and my mother surprises us with stuff like turkey wings. I mean, for real for real, this pregnancy was a surprise. Maybe the biggest one ever! Like BOOM! LU, YOU HAVING A LITTLE BROTHER! Or . . . sister. SURPRISE!
"O . . . kay." My father caught eyes with my mother, and again, like they rehearsed it, they both shrugged. "Well, obviously neither of us will be able to get you from practice, and we figured you'd want to be there, so we've already made arrangements for, um"--he cleared his throat--"for Coach to bring you home."
I nodded, nibbling on the knobby end of the turkey bone.
"But it's exciting news, right?" My mother's smile looked like it could split the whole bottom half of her face.
"Yeah." I wiped grease from my mouth with the back of my hand. "But . . . it's a little . . . I don't know. It's . . . I just thought--"
"I know." My dad cut me off, put his fingertips on top of my mother's fingertips. "We did too."
What I was about to say was that I thought Mom couldn't have no more kids. That's what she always said. That's what they always said. That's what they said the doctors always said. According to them, I was a miracle. I wasn't supposed to even be born. So another baby was almost impossible. A miracle with some extra miracle-ness sprinkled on it.
Magic.
Lightning.
Striking. Twice.
Excerpted from Lu by Jason Reynolds
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.
“Pure gold.” —School Library Journal (starred review)
“The perfect anchor leg for a well-run literary relay.” —Kirkus Reviews
Lu must learn to leave his ego on the sidelines if he wants to finally connect with others in the climax to the New York Times bestselling and award-winning Track series from Jason Reynolds.
Lu was born to be cocaptain of the Defenders. Well, actually, he was born albino, but that’s got nothing to do with being a track star. Lu has swagger, plus the talent to back it up, and with all that—not to mention the gold chains and diamond earrings—no one’s gonna outshine him.
Lu knows he can lead Ghost, Patina, Sunny, and the team to victory at the championships, but it might not be as easy as it seems. Suddenly, there are hurdles in Lu’s way—literally and not-so-literally—and Lu needs to figure out, fast, what winning the gold really means.
Expect the unexpected in this final event in Jason Reynold’s award-winning and bestselling Track series.