• After Tupac and D Foster

    Overall Rating: ★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25½ Rating:85 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.2585%
    After Tupac and D Foster
    Jacqueline Woodson
    Putnam Young Adult, 2008
    Fiction
    ISBN: 0399246541
    160 pages
    Newbery Honor Book

    Synopsis

    A summer of adventure and loss, the unnamed narrator gains a new best friend named D Foster. Mysteriously coming out of nowhere, D quickly becomes friends with the narrator and her best friend Neeka. Throughout this coming of age text, the narrator takes us on a journey throughout her summer, starting when D shows up, just after Tupac gets shot for the first time, and ending when Tupac gets killed and D leaves to go live with her real mother. Woodson takes us back a few years to show the reality of living in Queens as an African American family, and many of the personal and national events that effect the block the narrator lives on.

    Critique

    Woodson, as always, delivers a profound story in a short and beautiful way. She has this talent of keeping you interested in the story itself while showing you the light and dark sides of life that many people face on a regular basis. All of the characters seem real, and you come to love them throughout the narrative, especially D, who is often so mysterious in one moment and deeply candid in the next that you feel both intimidated and comforted by her presence simultaneously. 

    Also, as always, Woodson integrates challenging subplots, like Neeka’s older brother, a young gay man who’s been wrongfully imprisoned, young Black men disappearing off the street and in jail for what seems like no reason, and the despair surrounding the death of Tupac. It wasn’t until after having read this book that I truly understood even a small portion of the gravity of Tupac’s life and what he represented to the African American community at large (a little personal thanks to Woodson for touching on that theme).

    In many ways, Woodson seems to be a YA Lit representation of Toni Morrison or Alice Walker. It’s not surprising that she keeps winning awards for her texts. They’re the perfect balance of engaging and enlightening with a unique voice and excellent literary quality. I recommend this book to readers 12+.

    Rating Rubric

    Enjoyable Read: ★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5100%

    Original Story: ★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4☆ Rating:80 Fraction:480%

    Original Plot: ★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4☆ Rating:80 Fraction:480%

    Language: ★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4☆ Rating:80 Fraction:480%

    Asthetics: ★ Rating:70 Fullstar:3 Star Piece:0.5 Fraction:3.5★ Rating:70 Fullstar:3 Star Piece:0.5 Fraction:3.5★ Rating:70 Fullstar:3 Star Piece:0.5 Fraction:3.5½ Rating:70 Star Piece:0.5 Fraction:3.5☆ Rating:70 Fraction:3.570%

    Depth In Characters: ★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4☆ Rating:80 Fraction:480%

    Depth In Story: ★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4☆ Rating:80 Fraction:480%

    Social Commentary: ★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5100%

    Layers/Complexity: ★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4★ Rating:80 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0 Fraction:4☆ Rating:80 Fraction:480%

    Classroom Text: ★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5★ Rating:100 Fullstar:5 Star Piece:0 Fraction:5100%

    Overall Rating: ★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25★ Rating:85 Fullstar:4 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.25½ Rating:85 Star Piece:0.25 Fraction:4.2585%

    For the Classroom

    This is a great book for a reading or literature class, especially for studies in racial relations, societal constructs during the 1990s in America, specifically New York, or just general reading.

    Other Books You May Like


    No Responses to “After Tupac and D Foster”

    Leave a Reply

    You must be logged in to post a comment.