DePrince was born in Sierra Leone, but after rebels killed her father and Lassa killed her mother, she was first sent to an orphanage and then adopted to the U.S. While at the orphanage, she came across a magazine cover featuring a ballerina, and -- although she did not at the time know what ballet was -- that cover was a catalyst that helped shape her future.
Midway through the book, DePrince talks briefly about some of the lasting impacts of her childhood in Sierra Leone (more to the point, the war in Sierra Leone -- her childhood was happy until her parents died). She doesn't say as much, but I imagine it was doubly difficult because it was impossible to articulate the things that scared her and why, and impossible for the adults around her in the States to guess. She makes brief mention, too, of health concerns (hers and her sisters'), although she doesn't go far into that -- perhaps because it wasn't the important part of the story, or perhaps because that felt more private. I'd love to know more about her sisters, and her family in general, but in this context it more or less works with what she offers.
The fourth star I gave the book is partly sentimental; it's a story that tugs on the heartstrings. But for a teenager's memoir (written with her mother), it's really well done, and it strikes a good balance between her past in Sierra Leone and her aspirations as a dancer. (There's a photo of the pirate dance, by the way, and I'm just sorry that I can't find a video on YouTube.) I haven't seen that many memoirs by young dancers. Perhaps this is because they still have, hopefully, their entire careers ahead of them (more common to see memoirs by young gymnasts, who might actually be at the end of their competitive careers); perhaps it is because there is not much outside the norm in their youths. There are also -- more importantly -- few black women in ballet, and fewer books by/about black women in ballet. It's nice to see this one.
I'd love to see an adult book from her some time down the line, when she's had time to figure out who she is as an adult and has seen more of the ballet world, but...call this a pleasant surprise.