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Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents (June 2021)
By Mariah Roze · 7 posts · 65 views
By Mariah Roze · 7 posts · 65 views
last updated Feb 12, 2024 09:45AM
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Black History Month (February 2019)
By Mariah Roze · 30 posts · 108 views
By Mariah Roze · 30 posts · 108 views
last updated Jan 16, 2019 05:54PM
What Members Thought

There are a few things I didn’t love here, with the odd structure of the novel being my primary complaint. (If you’re going the narration route, stick with it. Don’t give me random news reports and stage play-style dialogue.) That being said, the story is what really shines here. Justyce and his friends and all their complexity is relatable and poignant and something we really need to read about.
Stephen King once mentioned that readers will sometimes ask about his characters like they’re real p ...more
Stephen King once mentioned that readers will sometimes ask about his characters like they’re real p ...more

Sep 05, 2022
Rose
rated it
really liked it
Shelves:
quick-read,
young-adult,
favorites,
audiobooks,
contemporary,
drama,
read-in-2022,
tough-subjects,
romance,
crime
Quick review for a quick read. This is the second book in a month long reading project I'm doing in September 2022. I'm picking up banned books in YA, those that I've read and those which I haven't and doing a bit of a deep dive into them. First of which was "All American Boys" by Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely -you can find that review here. The book has been challenged or removed for reasons such as - directly quoted - "profanity", "sexual innuendo" and "anti-police sentiment"/police brutali
...more

This book made me feel sick to my stomach in many places... the gut-wrenching feeling of realizing this is how black males are treated makes me feel tired of "being black." Like physically tired of being of African American descent. Why can't we be treated as normal human beings?! This isn't quite "fiction" because the content of this book happens to people of color, specifically African American males every single damn day! It's ridiculous to hear when people say that racism doesn't exist or re
...more

It took me way too long to get to this book. It was worth the wait, and it is, sadly, still timely.
Justyce is a compelling character. A Black kid from a Black neighborhood who is now in a VERY white school, he is in a complex situation. He's smart and well-liked. He is also tokenized in many situations, and the reality of the bigotry in the world causes him to question who he is, what is his place in the world, and where he belongs.
The events in this book are heartbreaking and angering, and I' ...more
Justyce is a compelling character. A Black kid from a Black neighborhood who is now in a VERY white school, he is in a complex situation. He's smart and well-liked. He is also tokenized in many situations, and the reality of the bigotry in the world causes him to question who he is, what is his place in the world, and where he belongs.
The events in this book are heartbreaking and angering, and I' ...more

Some things were really well done and others needed some work. First the good stuff.
This book does an amazing job of capturing how it feels to wake up one day and realize that everything you thought about the world is wrong. You get to watch as Justyce becomes totally disillusioned with the world he's in. It's not that he was sheltered or totally naive before, but he had defense mechanisms in place that made him believe that it wouldn't happen to him. After the triggering incident, we watch as h ...more
This book does an amazing job of capturing how it feels to wake up one day and realize that everything you thought about the world is wrong. You get to watch as Justyce becomes totally disillusioned with the world he's in. It's not that he was sheltered or totally naive before, but he had defense mechanisms in place that made him believe that it wouldn't happen to him. After the triggering incident, we watch as h ...more

Powerful book in a small package. This book is timely - the main cahracter is an African American teen dealing with figuring out his place in the world, and also trying to figure out life - he's been profiled by the police, and he's experienced racism at the hands of classmates at this mostly white boarding school. He likes a white girl, and his mom doesn't approve, and then there are the guys from his neighborhood - so different and yet they understand these things in a way his school friends d
...more

Jan 26, 2018
Lisa
marked it as to-read
I have put this book on my to-read shelf.

Excellent!! Young adults should read this. All of this is present: driving while black, arrested for no reason, falsely accused of a crime, mistakenly thought to have a gun (which was a cell phone!), best friend killed by a policeman, policeman found not guilty... and even more.
But the way that Justyce deals with the mental anguish of all of this is by writing letters to Martin Luther King asking him what would he do?
Brilliantly done.
But the way that Justyce deals with the mental anguish of all of this is by writing letters to Martin Luther King asking him what would he do?
Brilliantly done.

Apr 14, 2016
Susanne
marked it as to-read

Jun 20, 2017
ColumbusReads
marked it as to-read

Sep 05, 2017
LeeEllen
marked it as to-read


Nov 21, 2017
Pamela Mullins
marked it as to-read

Dec 09, 2017
Louis Muñoz
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Dec 11, 2017
Laura
marked it as to-read

Feb 13, 2018
Krista the Krazy Kataloguer
marked it as to-read
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review of another edition
Shelves:
own-ebook,
to-read-goodreads-authors

Feb 25, 2018
Steph
marked it as to-read

Feb 28, 2018
Paula S
marked it as to-read

Apr 06, 2018
Andrea Kemper
marked it as to-read

Sep 23, 2018
Porscha
marked it as to-read

Apr 04, 2019
Wendy
marked it as to-read

Jun 04, 2019
Lindsay
marked it as to-read