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Amber McBride

Auteur de Me (Moth)

5 oeuvres 427 utilisateurs 18 critiques

Œuvres de Amber McBride

Me (Moth) (2021) 258 exemplaires
We Are All So Good at Smiling (2023) 116 exemplaires
Gone Wolf (2023) 33 exemplaires

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Membres

Critiques

Gr 8 Up—Moth, sole survivor of a car accident that killed her family, and Sani, a Navajo boy with an abusive
stepfather, take a road trip to the Navajo reservation where Sani's dad lives. As they drive, Sani tells Moth the origin
story of the Navajo, and Moth opens up about her grandfather, who taught her hoodoo. This emotional, educational
debut novel in verse builds to a beautiful ending.
 
Signalé
BackstoryBooks | 11 autres critiques | Apr 1, 2024 |
Gr 9 Up—When Whimsy and Faerry meet during in-patient treatment for clinical depression, they recognize the
magic within each other but are unsure what their connection may be. Beautifully written verse and a fairy-tale
metaphor give readers a better understanding of the struggles of living with clinical depression
 
Signalé
BackstoryBooks | 1 autre critique | Apr 1, 2024 |
I thought this was going to be a collection by Black teen poets and not by adults. Still, the poetry is rich and varied and powerful.
½
 
Signalé
jazzyjbox | Feb 19, 2024 |
The first half of Gone Wolf is a bleak Afro-Futurist version of life in the Bible Boot after a second Civil War splits the United States again. Inmate Eleven is a Blue in the capital city of Elite, where Clones (whites) rule, and Blues are enslaved, but everyone is fed on falsehoods and lies (sometimes via Bible Boot Learning Flash Cards) to perpetuate white supremacy. Blue and President Tuba's successor, Larkin, escape from the Bible Boot to a civil rights rally, where Larkin collapses, coughing.

The second half of the book is set in Charlottesville, VA, in 2022, where Imogen is seeing a fourth doctor. This doctor encourages Imogen to tell her story: the story of Inmate Eleven, who is infused with Imogen's own autobiographical details, like her dog/wolf Ira, her foster brothers Kin and Lark, and the pandemic that swept the world and took them away from her.

See also: The Probability of Everything by Sarah Everett

Quotes

"You are not being punished. This is just the way things are." (the lady in blue/Dr. Abby, 13)

"Sacrifices must be made for peace." Sometimes I feel like she should sacrifice something, but that is the thing. I feel too much. I feel so blue. (18)

Hate is illegal in the Bible Boot. Everyone lives peacefully. (flash card, 25)

Funny how quickly things become okay. (65)

It is sometimes hard not to cry, because I feel so much. (76)

"An Overseer, Inmate Eleven, is someone who teaches you." (Larkin in front of President Tuba, 93)

...I do ask a lot of questions, but just because I want to understand. (104)

That kind of sadness wears on the soul and shows on the skin. There is a word for it - generational trauma. (Truth Tubman/Inmate Sixteen letter to Inmate Eleven, 124)

"I don't know a lot about outside but I don't think people are made for things." (Imogen to Larkin, 137)

It is hard to pretend when you can't unsee something. (148)

"We should use the truth, and not what is easy." (167)

"You have to forgive and sometimes you have to forgive the same person many times."
I am working on forgiving as a verb. (192)

Voices are important...but faces tell entire stories. (196)

...history repeats itself when we forget to remember it correctly. When facts are changed and lies make people afraid, the hate can come back. (King, 199)

How many mistakes can one country make?
How much forgiveness is there? (200)

Dr. Lovingood wants me to deal with all the truth, but sometimes the truth feels like an extra-large piece of bubble gum that I can't keep chewing, because it hurts my jaw too much and makes me cry. (207)

"Sometimes stories tell us something true even if the story is not all the way true." (Dr. Lovingood to Imogen, talking about griots and the African storytelling culture, 209)

African Americans used storytelling to record history and document what happened to them while enslaved. Without this oral tradition, many truths about the American South might have been lost to history.
Slavery was abolished in 1865, which means slavery has only been illegal for 155 years. Owning human beings was legal for over 350 years in the United States... (Black History for Kids, 215)

Yesterday, I learned a new term: cognitive dissonance. It means thinking two opposite things at once. Mama taught me the term when we were watching the news. (235)
… (plus d'informations)
 
Signalé
JennyArch | 2 autres critiques | Jan 6, 2024 |

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Statistiques

Œuvres
5
Membres
427
Popularité
#57,179
Évaluation
3.8
Critiques
18
ISBN
16

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