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Leaving Yesler - by Peter Bacho (Paperback)

Leaving Yesler - by  Peter Bacho (Paperback)
Store: Target
Last Price: 7.89 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br><p>Young Adult Fiction. Features a sensitive, mixed-race (Puerto Rican and black) protagonist (Bobby). Deals with loss, dangers within the projects, ethnic and sexual identity.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Fiction. Filipino American Studies. Latino/Latina Studies. African American Studies. Young Adult Fiction. LEAVING YESLER features a sensitive, mixed-race protagonist (Bobby). Bobby's life is difficult-in short order, he lost his mom to cancer and his older protective brother to Vietnam. His Filipino stepfather is old and not long for the world. The plot, which takes place in the politically tumultuous year of 1968, follows him from his last days in the Yesler Terrace housing project in Seattle to just short of his first day in college. Not only must he survive the dangers within the projects, he must also come to terms with questions about his ethnic identity and his sexuality. The novel is set within the literary realm of magical realism. The ghosts of Bobby's mother and older brother continuously reappear to comfort and advise him. It would best be classified as Young Adult, although it is clearly not limited to such an audience. Essentially, this is a coming-of-age novel set in an urban environment, and it deals with serious issues in a young man's growth and development.</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><em>"</em>Leaving Yesler<em> is a fun, engaging read. It's Bacho's first attempt to write for a young adult audience. And he succeeds wonderfully, telling a moving coming-of-age story in a relaxed, elegant style, that pulls you into a world of struggle and violence, but also of courage and perseverance-a world where Pinoys fight on despite the odds, and where Bobby Vincente, the hero of the story, eventually learns not to lose sight of what's worth fighting for..." </em>-Benjamin Pimentel, Inquirer Global Nation</p><p><em>"At some point in Bobby's life, he discovers what the word heroic means even if you find yourself in the wrong war or the wrong neighborhood..."</em> - Shawn Wong</p><p><em>"Author Peter Bacho, a two-time winner of the American Book Award, explores themes of belief/disbelief, arrival/departure, and love/violence, through which he achieves a portrait of embodied strength in his protagonist. Bobby Vincente is sensitive, faithful, and determined not to be defined or limited by anyone other than himself. This struggle takes him to the boxing ring, where his physicality is awakened; to community college, where he studies in hope of passing the GED and avoiding the draft. Out of Bobby's sexual and emotional growth emerges a great capacity for forgiveness, a penchant for cooking, and a deep commitment to family. Bacho accentuates Bobby's stressful mental state by making use of a narrative style that is blunt and interrogative. He creates a stream of constant self-definition and re-definition that rides up along the emotional highs of love, success, and pride and down through the lows of rejection, loss, and shame, while also opening the story to a host of literal spirits." </em>-Patty Comeau, ForeWord Magazine</p><br>

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