Cover Image: Piecing Me Together

Piecing Me Together

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Member Reviews

Thank-you to NetGalley for, once again, providing me with food for thought. Not just about race, but a search for the self that will strike a chord with anyone who's ever felt uncertain about who they are and what they have to offer.

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The writing is captivating. It's such a short book but it feels longer in a good way. Although I wouldn't of been against it being longer.
The characters transformation all felt very meaningful. They all seemed to learn things from Jade once she really found her voice and confidence to speak up for what she wants and feels.

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Piecing Me Together by Renée Watson is absolutely stunning and brilliant. I loved it through and through. I will be looking for Renée Watson's other books and follow her future books.

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Piecing Me Together really illustrates the frustration of people not seeing things from your perspective. The friendship between Jade and Sam was so complex and normally you seen this frustration played out through strangers, but for it to be a best friend that kept themselves ignorant was really something else. This book had moments of real power. It was inspirational and thought-provoking, one I would one hundred per cent recommend for those desperate for something more after 'The Hate You Give' and 'Love, Hate & Other Filters'.

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A gripping and inspiring book - very powerful and moving

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Piecing Me Together tells the story of Jade, a scholarship student at St Francis, a school on the other side of town from her. It's a beautifully moving story of the difficulties of being black in a predominantly white school, a school where black girls being assaulted by police officers don't even register on most students' radars. It's also about friendship, role models, and how different people articulate their blackness in a white world. Despite touching on some serious subjects like police brutality the book covers these without being too miserable - you won't need a unicorn chaser after reading this, but you will want best friends like Sam and Lee Lee. I also have to give an honourable mention to Lee Lee's poem, which is amazing.

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I so enjoyed this book about Jade, a young black American woman finding out who she is and what she is capable of. I learnt lots from the book about American culture and attitudes. Jade is am amazing young woman, talented and clever, she wants to travel and be something in the world but feels conflicted about leaving her mum and family behind. She is given a mentor but isn't sure if she really needs or wants this woman's help even though it will mean college scholarship at the end. A really interesting read.

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Piecing Me Together is such an important and moving book. It released during Black History Month, and was perhaps overshadowed by the buzz surrounding the amazing The Hate U Give that followed up a month later. Both books look at what it means to be a black teen in modern America, but their tones and focal points are different.

The Hate U Give is a hard-hitting book about one of the most horrific problems facing America today: the shooting of unharmed, black teenagers. It pulls no punches; it rips your heart out; it says what needs to be said.

Piecing Me Together, on the other hand, is a quieter read. It's about the everyday microaggressions that Jade faces as a scholarship student at a mostly-white school. It's about art - collages specifically (hence the cover) - and using this as a form of expression. It's about careful, nuanced friendships, identity and self-worth.
Sometimes I just want to be comfortable in this skin, this body. Want to cock my head back and laugh loud and free, all my teeth showing, and not be told I’m too rowdy, too ghetto.

Jade describes herself as a bigger girl, and the book proceeds to consider standards of beauty and how they are forced upon us.

But where this book stands out (and, really, where it shouldn't stand out) is that it is less about relations between black people and white people, and more about class issues within race. In Piecing Me Together, Jade joins "Women to Women", a program that connects young black teens with older, successful black women in order to *hopefully* improve their prospects.

Jade, however, struggles to connect with her mentor - Maxine - because Maxine grew up surrounded by wealth. The author shows these divides along wealth and class lines within race and how this affects relationships between wealthy and poor black women, whilst also showing how racial divides affect the relationship between Jade and her equally poor white friend, Sam.

It's things like this that really open my eyes to my privilege as a white reader. It is thankfully not strange anymore to read a book with a diverse set of characters, or a book that explores white/POC racial divides, but the real test of equality will not be when it's normal to see many POC among the white people on our screens and in our books, but when relationships between POC (of different class/religion/background/etc.) are explored as much as the relationships between white people.

This book takes some very necessary steps in that direction. It's also a powerful coming-of-age story, made easy to read in one sitting by the author's engaging style. Highly recommended for YA Contemporary fans.

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