Gone wolf / Amber McBride.
Record details
- ISBN: 9781250850492 (hardcover)
- Physical Description: 348 pages ; 22 cm
- Edition: First edition.
- Publisher: New York : Feiwel and Friends, 2023.
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | African Americans > Juvenile fiction. Psychic trauma > Juvenile fiction. Grief > Juvenile fiction. Race relations > Juvenile fiction. COVID-19 (Disease) > Juvenile fiction. |
Genre: | Psychological fiction. Bildungsromans. Dystopian fiction. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at Tsuga Consortium.
Holds
- 0 current holds with 1 total copy.
Location | Call Number / Copy Notes | Barcode | Shelving Location | Status | Due Date |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Cookstown Branch | J FIC McBri | 31681030030514 | JFIC | Available | - |
- Baker & Taylor
A twelve-year-old Black girl deals with fear, grief, pain, and suffering caused by the Covid-19 pandemic and America's history of enslavement and racist violence. - Baker & Taylor
"In her first middle-grade novel, an award-winning author explores Black pain, trauma, and ultimately, healing through the story of what might happen if white supremacists ceded from the rest of the country. Simultaneous eBook." - McMillan Palgrave
In Gone Wolf, her first middle-grade novel, award-winning author Amber McBride explores Black pain, trauma, and ultimately, healing through the story of what might happen if white supremacists ceded from the rest of the country. - McMillan Palgrave
Award-winning author Amber McBride lays bare the fears of being young and Black in America, in this middle-grade novel that has been compared to the work of Jordan Peele and praised as "brilliantly inventive storytelling" by Publishers Weekly.
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In the future, a Black girl known only as Inmate Eleven is kept confined -- to be used as a biological match for the president's son, should he fall ill. She is called a Blue -- the color of sadness. She lives in a small-small room with her dog, who is going wolf more often â heâs pacing and imagining heâs free. Inmate Eleven wants to go wolf tooâshe wants to know why she feels so Blue and what is beyond her small-small room.
In the present, Imogen lives outside of Washington DC. The pandemic has distanced her from everyone but her mother and her therapist. Imogen has intense phobias and nightmares of confinement. Her two older brothers used to help her, but now sheâs on her own, until a college student helps her see the difference between being Blue and sad, and Black and empowered.
In this symphony of a novel, award-winning author Amber McBride lays bare the fears of being young and Black in America, and empowers readers to remember their voices and stories are important, especially when they feel the need to go wolf.