When We Make It
“I am supposed to be someone. Someday … That’s what my teachers keep telling me. / My potential is something they like to throw in my face … I could be someone if I really wanted to? / So, who do they think I am now?” Teenage Sarai lives with her mom and older sister, Estrella, in Bushwick in the 1990s. She is proudly Puerto Rican and joyfully celebrates her identity even as she wonders if she can claim it when she’s never been to the island. The struggle to keep a roof over their heads and food in their bellies has left their mom bitter and angry, but the sisters love and support each other. When their family finally gets an apartment they can stay in for awhile, it’s in a broken down building where drug dealing is a daily occurrence. Sarai dreams of getting out of Bushwick, a place the police and media see as problematic and violent, but also knows there’s so much more to Bushwick beyond these stereotypes, and that the place is part of her in many good ways. Sarai is 13 when the novel opens; 15 and a mother by story’s end, determined to love her daughter the way she was never loved, determined to love herself, and determined to embrace who she is and where she comes from as the starting point for her dreams. This smart, stunning debut with its searing social observation and commentary is grounded in Sarai’s raw, exquisite voice. ©2022 Cooperative Children’s Book Center
CCBC Age Recommendation: Age 13 and older
Age Range:
Grades 6-8 (Ages 11-13)
Grades 9-12 (Age 14 and older)
Formats:
Novel
Poetry
Subjects:
20th Century
Affirmation
Community
Economic Hardship and Poverty
Education
Historical Fiction
Identity
Novels in Verse
Puerto Ricans
Teen Pregnancy
Diversity subject:
Latine
Christian
Publishers:
Dial, Penguin Random House
Publish Year: 2021
Pages: 375
ISBN: 9780593324486
CCBC Location: Fiction, Velasquez