While spending the summer helping her grandmother run a restaurant in a decaying, dangerous neighborhood on the edge of Pittsburgh, thirteen-year-old Cab meets many colorful characters and helps with the neighborhood crime watch
Jenny Davis has never been a person to sit on the sidelines. In her writing, teaching, and social activism she has translated her personal experiences--both pleasant and unpleasant--in ways that can help young people survive adolescence. Social concerns such as unemployment, homelessness, illiteracy, and violent crime are shown from the viewpoint of Davis's teen protagonists in such highly praised novels as Good-Bye and Keep Cold and Checking on the Moon.
Growing up involves more than just overcoming one or two obstacles for the young people who inhabit these novels. It means confronting a never-ending succession of challenges. In each of Davis's books, written in an engaging conversational style, teens learn that parents are not always right, and that violence, old age, insecurity, and loneliness are all a part of life, sometimes conquerable, more often accepted and endured to the best of one's ability.
"I try very hard not to write down to anyone, myself included," Davis told an Authors and Artists for Young Adults (AAYA) interviewer.
I read this book because it is set in Pittsburgh. More specifically an imaginary neighborhood in Pittsburgh. No one in Pittsburgh says they are from Pittsburgh. Everyone who lives there identifies themselves with a particular area of the city. In this book is it Washco. The main character, Cab Jones, moves there to live with her estranged grandmother, from the wide open spaces of Texas. She will be separated from her mother for the very first time. She learns how to make friends, how to live in a community, and builds a relationship with her very special grandmother. Washco is dealing with some very serious issues, and our herione, Cab, is important in the community's effort to solve them. Similar to Hope Was Here by Joan Bauer
When Cab Jones's mother goes on a European concert tour with her new husband, Cab and her brother Bill must leave their small Texas town to spend the summer in Washco, a decaying Pittsburgh neighborhood, with a grandmother she doesn't know. How the grandmother and the neighborhood become Cab's own is the heart of this appealing book. Ordinary changes - Cab's learning to care about a variety of people in the neighborhood as well as finding a new friend her own age - form a counterpoint to a larger social issue when violent crime strikes in Washco, and Cab must grow up in more ways than one.