Parrot in the Oven: Mi Vida
Dad believed people were like money. You could be a thousand-dollar person or a hundred-dollar person -- even a ten-, five-, or one-dollar person. Below that, everybody was just nickels and dimes. To my dad, we were pennies. Fourteen-year-old Manny Hernandez wants to be more than just a penny....
show more
Dad believed people were like money. You could be a thousand-dollar person or a hundred-dollar person -- even a ten-, five-, or one-dollar person. Below that, everybody was just nickels and dimes. To my dad, we were pennies. Fourteen-year-old Manny Hernandez wants to be more than just a penny. He wants to be a vato firme, the kind of guy people respect. But that′s not easy when your father is abusive, your brother can′t hold a job, and your mother scrubs the house as if she can wash her troubles away. In Manny′s neighborhood, the way to get respect is to be in a gang. But Manny′s not sure that joining a gang is the solution. Because, after all, it′s his life -- and he wants to be the one to decide what happens to it.
show less
Format: paperback
ISBN:
9780064471862 (0064471861)
Publish date: December 28th 2004
Publisher: Rayo
Pages no: 224
Edition language: English
Category:
Young Adult,
Childrens,
Classics,
Novels,
Academic,
School,
Cultural,
Realistic Fiction,
Drama,
Family,
Coming Of Age
Original Review Posted at Bookwyrming ThoughtsNote: Formatting is lost due to copy and paste. Oh. Another required reading. Yay. After Dreamland's disaster, I was going to call it quits here and go hide in a cubicle for awhile. Not that it's bad idea... but I'm pretty sure I would've failed high...