Copyright Date:
2017
Edition Date:
2017
Release Date:
05/30/17
Pages:
xxv, 199 pages
ISBN:
0-9969274-5-X
ISBN 13:
978-0-9969274-5-1
Dewey:
Fic
Dimensions:
22 cm.
Language:
English
Reviews:
School Library Journal
(Mon Jan 01 00:00:00 CST 2018)
Gr 8 Up-Tajon Williams, a black teen, sells weed as a means of getting his mother and sister away from his abusive and alcoholic father He is threatened at gunpoint by the neighborhood drug dealer into handing over his weed supply without receiving money from him. Their transaction is interrupted by a white police officer, and Tajon is shot twice while running from the officer. The shooting is witnessed by Razia, a longtime school friend of Tajon. She knows Tajon did not have a gun, contrary to the police officer's claims. Her sister, Angel, is best friends with Ashley, a white female member of the basketball team who figures out the police officer is none other than her own father, Pete. Her brother, Zach, lashes out at Pete for shooting his friend. When the school finds out Pete is their father, it is Ashley who unwittingly earns the wrath from Angel and the basketball team. The 10 teen writers of Beacon House have brilliantly crafted a YA book in which they take on the perspectives of 10 central characters. Each is given multiple layers. However, Pete's nameless wife and Ashley and Zach's mother are not as nuanced. Readers will appreciate the usage of multimedia, such as newspaper headlines, social media, and protest signs and posters. The book gives off an element of anticipation, which will cause readers to wonder the outcome of the comotose Tajon's condition. Readers will also be alarmed at the list of unarmed people of color killed by police in the United States, from March 2015 to the writing of this book. VERDICT This smart and courageous YA novel will open up a dialogue started by young voices who deserve to be heard. A strong purchase. Donald Peebles, Brooklyn Public Library
Ten teen girls from Washington, D.C., wrote this novel during the rise of the Black Lives Matter movement. They asked: What happens when a black youth is the victim of police violence? Each writer takes a perspective--victim, officer, witness, friend, officer's kids--and examines how it feels to be a human being on all sides of this event.his event.