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GRACE NOTES

POEMS ABOUT FAMILIES

Beautifully written poetry about the butterfly effect of human experience.

A powerful account of a mother’s life, narrated in verse by award-winner Nye, the former Young People’s Poet Laureate.

Nye describes small meaningful moments from major events in the life of her late mother, Miriam Naomi Allwardt Shihab. The opening poem introduces Miriam, explaining how she met Nye’s Palestinian immigrant father in Kansas, marrying him only three months later. Subsequent entries delve into Miriam’s mental health, which was affected by her rigid upbringing (“Her parents were tightly closed German boxes”); Miriam struggled with depression later in life (“You could never tell your friends. / Before I was born, my mama tried to die”). On the subject of her parents’ marital conflict, Nye notes that “children who live in sad houses / hope to fix things.” However, the poems also uphold Miriam’s profoundly positive impact as a mother who passed on her global awareness and empathy, passion for the arts, and respect for diversity: “She never thought she was / the center of the world.” Understanding her mother’s mysteries becomes a quest for Nye to both understand herself and appreciate Miriam more deeply: “Maybe we are all born from our mother’s kilns,” she states in her introduction. Her writing dwells upon the secret mysteries of our lives and the grace it takes to forgive and love others. Through this intimate and compassionate exploration of one woman’s life, readers receive an invitation to contemplate human interconnectedness.

Beautifully written poetry about the butterfly effect of human experience. (index) (Poetry. 13-18)

Pub Date: May 7, 2024

ISBN: 9780062691873

Page Count: 352

Publisher: Greenwillow Books

Review Posted Online: April 20, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2024

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PASSPORT

A truth-is-stranger-than-fiction story about a lost soul finding her way.

Navigating high school is hard enough, let alone when your parents are CIA spies.

In this graphic memoir, U.S. citizen Glock shares the remarkable story of a childhood spent moving from country to country; abiding by strange, secretive rules; and the mystery of her parents’ occupations. By the time she reaches high school in an unspecified Central American nation—the sixth country she’s lived in—she’s begun to feel the weight of isolation and secrecy. After stealing a peek at a letter home to her parents from her older sister, who is attending college in the States, the pieces begin to fall into place. Normal teenage exploration and risk-taking, such as sneaking out to parties and flirtations with boys, feel different when you live and go to school behind locked gates and kidnapping is a real risk. This story, which was vetted by the CIA, follows the author from childhood to her eventual return to a home country that in many ways feels foreign. It considers the emotional impact of familial secrets and growing up between cultures. The soft illustrations in a palette of grays and peaches lend a nostalgic air, and Glock’s expressive faces speak volumes. This is a quiet, contemplative story that will leave readers yearning to know more and wondering what intriguing details were, of necessity, edited out. Glock and many classmates at her American school read as White; other characters are Central American locals.

A truth-is-stranger-than-fiction story about a lost soul finding her way. (Graphic memoir. 13-18)

Pub Date: Nov. 30, 2021

ISBN: 978-0-316-45898-6

Page Count: 320

Publisher: Little, Brown

Review Posted Online: June 10, 2021

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Aug. 1, 2021

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THE BEAUTIFUL STRUGGLE (ADAPTED FOR YOUNG ADULTS)

A beautiful meditation on the tender, fraught interior lives of Black boys.

The acclaimed author of Between the World and Me (2015) reflects on the family and community that shaped him in this adaptation of his 2008 adult memoir of the same name.

Growing up in Baltimore in the ’80s, Coates was a dreamer, all “cupcakes and comic books at the core.” He was also heavily influenced by “the New York noise” of mid-to-late-1980s hip-hop. Not surprisingly then, his prose takes on an infectious hip-hop poetic–meets–medieval folklore aesthetic, as in this description of his neighborhood’s crew: “Walbrook Junction ran everything, until they met North and Pulaski, who, craven and honorless, would punk you right in front of your girl.” But it is Coates’ father—a former Black Panther and Afrocentric publisher—who looms largest in his journey to manhood. In a community where their peers were fatherless, Coates and his six siblings viewed their father as flawed but with the “aura of a prophet.” He understood how Black boys could get caught in the “crosshairs of the world” and was determined to save his. Coates revisits his relationships with his father, his swaggering older brother, and his peers. The result will draw in young adult readers while retaining all of the heart of the original.

A beautiful meditation on the tender, fraught interior lives of Black boys. (maps, family tree) (Memoir. 14-18)

Pub Date: Jan. 12, 2021

ISBN: 978-1-984894-03-8

Page Count: 176

Publisher: Delacorte

Review Posted Online: Oct. 26, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Nov. 15, 2020

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