By far the best early review book I've received and read to date. I liked this book so much that is is difficult to put into words the beauty of it! Michelle is inspired to enroll in the Teach for America project. She lands in the Southern Delta in Helena Arkansas. Helena is a sleepy town with little outlet, majority of the people are black, and there are very few jobs.
Her parents came to America from Asia. Before arriving in Helena, she read Malcolm x, many books of Martin Luther King, Jr. and the Civil Rights Movement. On fire to impart her knowledge to a classroom of students who landed in a STAR program composed of those who are on the verge of flunking.
She takes a special interest in all her students as she learns of their backgrounds and the many things stacked against them, including families with drug addictions, sisters who have more than one child at an early age, incredible poverty, and because most are black they have an extreme low self concept and and inability to use punctuation, to understand, and to write their thoughts and feelings. Feeling there is no way out of their situation, sadly this equates to the belief that there is nothing they can do to rise about it all.
She takes particular interest in Patrick who is quiet, does not engage with fights of others, and seems to have a desire to learn. When the Star program ends after two years, she attends law school at Harvard. Graduating, she has a lucrative offer, but learning that Patrick has been jailed for murder propels her to return to the Delta to learn more , and to perhaps apply her legal knowledge to assist him.
She learns that, as many, Patrick's case is shoved to the bottom, and he doesn't even know if a lawyer is assigned to him. Sadly, while protecting his sister who he deems as "a little slow,", he overreacts when a boy either high or drunk argues with him. Patrick doesn't remember much, other than the boyfriend is dead as a result of multiple stab wounds as a result of a fight on his porch.
Michelle takes much of her time and effort in visiting Patrick and teaching him poetry, YA books such as The Lion, The Witch and the Wardrobe by C.S. Lewis, and many other books she feels will help him. While he is depressed and knows he must pay for what he did, Michele is the ray of light that propels him forward.
This is a book about racism, poverty, the abject discrepancy of how blacks are treated opposed to whites, not only in the educational system, but in the legal system as well. It is a story of trying to beat the odds. Mainly, it is a story about a person who cares from the bottom of her heart. She listens, she cares, and together the stories and poems Patrick reads open up a new sense of awareness in both of them.
For seven months, before his hearing in court, they read the stories of Malxom X, Frederick Douglass, James Baldwin. It is poetry that unlocks his soul, and Michelle's challenging methods of teaching push him to a place where he tries desperately to apply the stories to his life.
After writing this, I still don't think I can express the power of this book. Mainly, those of us who read book after book, can relate to the power of words well written. Some of us who have had less than perfect childhoods, can try to understand the ways in which our past impacts our future, and that by leaving behind the damaging memories, one can, if they are motivated, try to live with a new paradigm and move forward. And, sometimes one distinct person can make a difference.
That difference however, can only go so far. And, as Michelle learns after Patrick's trial, plea bargain and eventual release from jail, she cannot save the world, or one person.
Five stars for this book that brought smiles, tears and that reminded me once again why I love the power of words.