If you have not had a chance to read one of her books, try this one first. When I first started reading this book, I had no clue that Rekab had written other books and I thought this writer needs to continue to write she has a voice that should be heard - and then I looked her up (laugh) and she has been writing. Enter for a chance to win one of 100 copies of Phianna Rekabs memoir, Busted: A Memo. It is a familiar tale, unfortunately, but I think it is one that every teenager should read and should be part of a high school reading list because it gives the point of view from her at that age and Rekab's voice is perfectly shown for that time period. She holds the mirror up to everyone - including herself. She indicates this through her stories of her family, friends, and herself. Ugly pain and hardship meets good humor as she details her personal story of migrating from the Caribbean and growing up in Brooklyn, New York in the 1980s. Coming to America in the 1980s, Rekab's family came at a period where you would have thought all of the strife of hard living would have passed, but it never does if you are a non-white. Her voice changes from the child hiding under the table sipping sweet milk to the disillusioned yet still oddly hopeful American immigrant. Phianna Rekab's teenage voice clearly shows through this memoir of those years from her travels from her home in the Caribbean to the dreamland called America.
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