Bound To Stay Bound

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 Punching the air
 Author: Zoboi, Ibi Aanu

 Publisher:  HarperCollins (2020)

 Classification: Fiction
 Physical Description: 386 p., ill., 21 cm

 BTSB No: 924656 ISBN: 9780062996480
 Ages: 14-18 Grades: 9-12

 Subjects:
 African Americans -- Fiction
 Artists -- Fiction
 Race discrimination -- Fiction
 Administration of criminal justice -- Fiction
 Race relations -- Fiction
 Novels in verse

Price: $24.48

Summary:
Amal Shahid has always been an artist and a poet. But even in a diverse art school, because of a biased system he's seen as disruptive and unmotivated. Then one fateful night, an altercation in a gentrifying neighborhood escalates into tragedy.

 Added Entry - Personal Name: Salaam, Yusef
 Illustrator: Pasha, Omar T.


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Accelerated Reader Information:
   Interest Level: UG
   Reading Level: 5.70
   Points: 5.0   Quiz: 509958

Reviews:
   Kirkus Reviews (+) (08/01/20)
   School Library Journal (+) (00/08/20)
   Booklist (06/01/23)
 The Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books (00/10/20)
 The Hornbook (+) (00/09/20)

Full Text Reviews:

School Library Journal - 08/01/2020 Gr 8 Up—Sixteen-year-old Amal is tried and convicted of an act of violence against a white boy. While there is a sense that he might not have done what he was accused of doing, it is unimportant whether this is the case for the book to work. Through Amal's first-person verse narration, readers learn about his aspirations as a poet and artist, as well as his experience entering the prison system as a young Black man. It is clear that Amal has had a complex relationship with his education, particularly with his art teacher, who clearly saw his talent but also did not work very hard to support Amal's burgeoning interest, and did a bad job of being a character witness at his trial. The authors do an excellent job of showing how the prison experience can dehumanize young men and how their inherent talents can be overshadowed by their feelings of powerlessness and rage. Coauthored by Zoboi and Salaam, who is one of the Exonerated Five and, as such, has firsthand experience of serving an unfair and unjust prison sentence, this book is not a memoir. Instead, it can be seen as an important statement about widespread experiences and the prison industrial complex, rather than the depiction of a single, notable case. What is clear is that this is not an isolated story. VERDICT This book will be Walter Dean Myers's Monster for a new generation of teens. An important, powerful, and beautiful novel that should be an essential purchase for any library that serves teens.—Kristin Lee Anderson, Jackson County Lib. Svcs., OR - Copyright 2020 Publishers Weekly, Library Journal and/or School Library Journal used with permission.

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