A life affirming story of rehabilitation and hope after prison. The third novel from multi-award-winning Danielle Jawando, perfect for fans of Angie Thomas and Elizabeth Acevedo.
'Jawando's writing is incredibly raw and real; I felt completely immersed' Alice Oseman, author of the Heartstopper series
When fifteen-year-old Tyrell Forrester gets caught up in a high-profile armed robbery, he's sentenced to two years in a young offenders' prison. Now he's getting out, and he's determined to turn his life around. Despite his release, systemic discrimination makes it difficult for Ty to truly be free. Inspired by a visiting poet while inside, Ty discovers a whole new world through spoken word and is finally finding his voice. But will society ever see him as anything other than a criminal?
Title : If My Words Had Wings
Authors : Danielle Jawando
Format : eARC
Page Count : 384
Genre : Contemporary YA
Publisher : Simon YA
Release Date : May 9, 2024
Reviewer : Micky
Rating : ★ ★ ★ ★ ★
Micky's 5 star review
Headlines:
Injustice prevailing
Survival
Coping mechanisms
This heart-stopping story brings the reader into a world few of us will have experience of. Tyrell was a young man in a prison for young offenders, he committed a crime but the payment was heavy. The first half of the book centred on the latter part of his incarceration and the second half centred on life afterwards; neither of those experiences were easy, far from it.
Through Ty's eyes I learnt more about joint enterprise and how black young men are targetted by police and the word 'gangs' is thrown about easily and often unnecessarily. The gang matrix was a new concept to me and I looked up more information on this, I was pretty incredulous. These facts translated to characters in this story and Dadir absolutely pulled at my heart. At the end, as attached as I was to Ty, Dadir had all my questions, much of my compassion and angry tears.
Life behind bars for Ty was one big adrenaline surge to stay safe. The sense of tension he held at all times was palpable. I was looking over Ty's shoulders for him but it didn't help. Ty's outlet through this book was a talent he found in words on a page that translated into spoken word. There were some great advocates in this book and we needed to see those chinks of hope for Ty. I loved Malik and Becky's empowerment.
Family relationships were both complicated and frustrating. Reading Ty's connection with his brother and how that eventually played out brought a new set of tears. Ty was a young man with integrity, a crime is not everything about an identity even though society loves to see it that way. The Ty we met had emotional intelligence, an evolving ability to make decent decisions but some of his decisions had me figuratively reading through my fingers.
I'm left thinking what about all the Dadirs?
Danielle Jawando brought this story to life with heart, empowerment and hope. Her words have wings and she gave them to Ty.
I read an early copy of this book but it did not influence by honest opinion.
https://blackwells.co.uk/bookshop/product/If-My-Words-Had-Wings-by-Danielle-Jawando/9781398514034
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