After Tupac And D Foster
Average rating | ||
Based on 18 Ratings and 17 Reviews |
Book Description
FOR USE IN SCHOOLS AND LIBRARIES ONLY. Neeka and her friends think they understand challenging times on the streets. But they learn differently after befriending D, a young girl with a hard past who opens up about her real struggles.
Book Information
Publisher | Turtleback Books |
Binding | Library Binding (11 editions) |
Reading Level | Young Adults |
# of Pages | 153 |
ISBN-10 | 0606107207 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0606107204 |
Publication Date | 01/07/2010 |
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Reader Comments
8/26/2011 J.Aday Kennedy said:
tags: family relationships, newbery honor, award winner, girls, highly recommended, realistic fiction, kids' books, friendship, children's literature, middle school, children's fiction, fiction, juvenile fiction, juvenille fiction, children's book, I read, African AmericansI recommend, homosexuality, foster care
Neeka, her best friend, and newcomer Dee become a tight-knit trio. They adore Tupac. His lyrics speak to Dee especially. Each of the girls face some serious issues among them are foster care, unfair treatment of African Americans in courts and day-to-day, struggle for a better life, homosexuality... more
tags: family relationships, newbery honor, award winner, girls, highly recommended, realistic fiction, kids' books, friendship, children's literature, middle school, children's fiction, fiction, juvenile fiction, juvenille fiction, children's book, I read, African AmericansI recommend, homosexuality, foster care
6/22/2009 Chris Doyle said: I have come to really like this author. Her approach to characters is so touching.
tags: I read
tags: I read
5/1/2009 SJ Kessel said:
Woodson, J. (2008). After Tupac & D Foster. New York: G.P. Putnam’s Sons.
9780399246548
Woodson uses beautiful prose to share the experiences of the narrator, Neeka and their new friend D, who is in foster care. They maintain their friendships as they experience life in their neighborhood ... more
1/26/2009 LaTonya Baldwin said:
tags: multicultural, women of color writers, diversity, YA, I read
Contrary to popular belief not every parent of a an African American kid gets hip hop. I do get the rough times of being a tween, the challenges of being in foster care and how much it means to have friends. This book introduced me to a culture, hip hop, that I knew little about. This helped me unde... more
tags: multicultural, women of color writers, diversity, YA, I read
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