Something Like Right
Something Like Right
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2024--
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Farrar, Straus, Giroux
Annotation: A contemporary young adult novel about a biracial Black and white teen boy that shows a raw glimpse into the systemic inequality experienced by young people in racialized communities.
 
Reviews: 1
Catalog Number: #383692
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Copyright Date: 2024
Edition Date: 2024 Release Date: 08/20/24
Pages: 320 pages
ISBN: 0-374-38998-5
ISBN 13: 978-0-374-38998-7
Dewey: Fic
Dimensions: 22 cm
Language: English
Reviews:
Kirkus Reviews

After Black biracial Xavier gets in a fight with a 12th grade bully while protecting the boy's 9th grade victim, he's expelled from school.Zay must now finish his junior year at Broadlawn Alternative School, which is located hours away. The day he finds out he has to move in with his aunt and uncle (who live near Broadlawn), his white father is released from prison. Zay isn't happy about Keith's release; he feels betrayed by Ma for not telling him that Pops was getting out, and he isn't sure how to connect with his pops, who's been like "an imaginary friend" whom he's outgrown over the past 12 years. Hunter deftly depicts the mental and emotional complexities incarceration causes for both the newly released and their family members. Despite Zay's reluctance to leave home, the move turns out to be positive. He quickly bonds with his uncle, learns more about his parents, befriends Kenny (who's in his second stint at Broadlawn), and falls hard and fast for Feven, a girl who's new to the area and is originally from Eritrea. The voices of the three young people are outstanding; they each navigate significant emotional landscapes-Kenny faces the school-to-prison pipeline; Feven reckons with the pressures of immigration; and Xavier deals with the impact of generational trauma. The adults are notably also fully developed characters.An original setting for a highly relatable and memorable story about first love and second chances. (Fiction. 14-18)

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Kirkus Reviews
Reading Level: 6.0
Interest Level: 9-12

A contemporary young adult novel about one life-altering year of a biracial Black and white teen boy, showing a raw glimpse into the systemic inequality in racialized communities. Zay's ma always said his mouth would get him in trouble. Sure enough, it got him into his first and only fight in his junior year of high school. Expelled from his district, Zay's only hope for redemption is to transfer to Broadlawn Alternative School and complete the year. Zay isn't thrilled about the disgusting school lunch and classroom trailers at Broadlawn, and boarding with his aunt Mel and her live-in boyfriend isn't the greatest. But he'd rather be there than in the city dealing with his estranged father, his overbearing mother, and the fallout from his fight. Besides, Broadlawn has Feven, the beautiful new student Zay is starting to get to know--and fall for. Still, first love is rarely a fairy tale, and as Zay's time in Broadlawn comes to an end, he learns that shaping yourself within a new place is a lot harder than letting it shape you. A tender contemplation of first love, broken families, and healing generational trauma by an incredible voice in young adult fiction.


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