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M**A
Excellent condition, excellent content.
I bought this to update my curriculum teaching grade 8 English. Very happy with the content and the condition of the used book.
K**E
Good read
Great writing, very inspirational.
V**R
A Shot of Hope to the Veins
This set of essays runs the gambit of life experience, race, disabilities and religion and always with both clear eyed honesty and hope for both the present and the future.
M**R
explores the nature of hope and the many forms it can assume
ESSAYSRose Brock, editorHope Nation: YA Authors Share Personal Moments of InspirationPhilomel BooksHardcover, 978-1-5247-4167-9 (also available as an e-book and on Audible), 304 pgs., $18.99February 27, 2018“To know a person’s story is inevitably to understand their humanity and feel a loving kinship with them, no matter how different the two of you may seem at first. This … is what gives me hope.”—David Levithan, “We”Hope Nation: YA Authors Share Personal Moments of Inspiration is a new collection of essays edited by Dr. Rose Brock, a Texas librarian and educator, cofounder of the phenomenally successful North Texas Teen Book Festival and recipient of the Siddie Joe Johnson Award, bestowed by the Texas Library Association upon a librarian who “demonstrates outstanding library service to children.”Brock chose tales of “resilience, resistance, hardship, loss, love, tenacity, and acceptance” from some of her favorite Young Adult authors because, as Mister Rogers famously advised, “during a crisis, it’s vital to look for the helpers.” Brock considers these authors and their stories to be helpers.“Sometimes, hope is asking for help because you need someone else’s hope to light the way.” —Libba Bray, “Before and After”There are some very big names here: Jason Reynolds, Angie Thomas, Nicola Yoon; authors with Texas ties include Libba Bray, Marie Lu, Kate Hart, and Julie Murphy. Each author has donated 100 percent of their fees to charity, matched by Penguin Random House.Some of these essays made me smile, some made me laugh aloud, others touched me deeply; still others left me teary, and they all offered perspective. Hope Nation’s contributors are smart, generous, passionate, compassionate people; they come from many races, ethnicities, genders, religions, and persuasions.“My hope lies in young Book People … our brightest beacons of empathy. It takes great empathy to be so interested in the lives of other people that you don’t even demand that they really exist.” —Jeff Zentner, “Nobody Remembers the Names of People Who Build Walls”These pieces explore the nature of hope and the many forms it can assume [new life, a song, humor —see Kate Hart’s “Wings and Teeth” for her internal debate with her Shoulder Cynic, and I. W. Gregorio’s “origin story of a female urologist” — travel, bakeries], even in the face of abuse, discrimination, disease or injury, poverty, and addiction. Many of these stories deal with immigration, a particularly timely topic. Some essays are more literal than others, and Emily Dickinson’s “hope is the thing with feathers” gets a workout.Very occasionally a pedantic tone emerges, more often the tone is gentle exhortation, even if sometimes harrowing and profoundly personal (see “In the Past” by Jenny Torres Sanchez). Some take on the era of Trump head-on, such as Aisha Saeed’s “The Only One I Can Apologize For.” Others are subtle, like Alex London’s “Different Dances,” but the personal is always political.“Sometimes you have to search for tiny hopes until tiny hopes make bigger hopes.” —Julie Murphy, “Hoping for Home”Nic Stone’s “Always” finds commonalities. Ally Carter’s “The Two Types of Secrets” recommends finding examples and mentors, in which the care and feeding of dreams is like yeast—a living thing which requires care. Jason Reynolds and Brendan Kiely discuss the kids they met and things they learned on the tour for All American Boys, such as easy doesn’t equal happiness, and difficult doesn’t equal sadness. And if all else fails, break out the Shel Silverstein.“Hope is a decision.” —Rose BrockOriginally published in Lone Star Literary Life.
A**
Five Stars
Great and amazing a must reas
H**R
Sparkling Voices of Hope
Superstar young adult authors come together in this outstanding collection of essays and stories, curated by educator and children's literacy expert Rose Brock, who has organized a collection that feels as vital and critically important today as when the book came out. As noted in the preface, "Hope is a decision we all can make." There are many brave, funny, and heartrending decisions in this read. To note, the companion anthology HOPE WINS is curated for a middle-grade reading audience, and both would be a welcome addition to any library or personal bookshelf.
E**H
Inspirational!
This lovely compilation of personal/autobiographical essays by many popular BIPOC or immigrant YA authors is a response to the disappointment and fears felt by many young people, particularly young people of color or from immigrant backgrounds, after the 2016 election. Each essay shares a bit of the author's personal experience living in the United States, naming the challenges, but infused with hope. There is also a lovely thread on the power of books to combat hate.
K**P
Hope Will Guide You Home
"Nobody remembers the names of people who build walls" - by Jeff Zentner and also the title of his beautiful, inspiring essay in an anthology called Hope Nation. I loved this book and its reminder that hope is always there to guide us to love, beauty, truth, justice, and freedom.
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