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What Members Thought

This book just didn't work for me. Yes, I am cold and I have no heart.
What I didn't understand until I'd started reading this was that this is not a memoir told in verse, as the blurb indicates, but instead it's a book of poems that together tell a story of the author's childhood. Some of the poems are quite nice (I never really achieved "mesmerizing" as the blurb promises), but some of them are irritating, they don't feel like natural poems, they feel like stream-of-consciousness sentences with ...more
What I didn't understand until I'd started reading this was that this is not a memoir told in verse, as the blurb indicates, but instead it's a book of poems that together tell a story of the author's childhood. Some of the poems are quite nice (I never really achieved "mesmerizing" as the blurb promises), but some of them are irritating, they don't feel like natural poems, they feel like stream-of-consciousness sentences with ...more

This book this book. Good like all of her books, but also good like it brought me back and made me remember so many good and bad things about growing up, going to school, being a kid who wanted to write, being a kid who was brown, etc etc. So good, this book. So important.

Jacqueline Woodson's memoir in verse is targeted at a middle grade audience however, it probably isn't something that my middle grade reader would pick up on his own. I listened to the audio book myself today as I was straightening the house and doing laundry and it was great. The author read it herself, which is as it should be with poetry.
Woodson tells of her childhood split between South Caroline and NYC with her 3 siblings...and of her discovery of her love of writing.
This book counts towa ...more
Woodson tells of her childhood split between South Caroline and NYC with her 3 siblings...and of her discovery of her love of writing.
This book counts towa ...more

This book is gorgeous. A memoir written in verse, of a childhood that witnessed well more than its fair share of tragedy. It's also a distinctly Black book, echoing so many archetypal African-American experiences - experiences that actually all happened in a short span of Woodson's childhood. Beautiful and inspiring, the book is a perfect read for first-time poetry readers as well as poetry lovers. And the cover alone would have been enough to make me pick it up, but it also won the Newbery Meda
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This book is extraordinary. I listened to the audio version (read by the author, always a bonus) and it was so beautiful I didn't want it to end. I cried at the beginning, I cried at the end (good tears, I promise). Read it.
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Written entirely in short poems, this book shares the early years of the author as she moves from Ohio to South Carolina to New York City. She describes her parent's marriage breakup, her grandfather's health, her love of stories, her struggle with following in her sister's footsteps, her best friend...all as a child experiences them, without true understanding and with quick acceptance. It's amazing how many important things she seems to remember and how she is able to share them as if they had
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Beautiful. I absolutely loved her voice, her language, her storytelling. A lovely read for readers of ALL ages. I can't wait to track down more of her writing.
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What a beautiful story of Woodson's childhood, her family and her journey to be a writer.
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Sep 01, 2016
Kate
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