

For his first book featuring a female protagonist, Reynolds has done an excellent job of providing insights into the life of an African American middle schooler.

She does all the work on her group project at school, and angrily counts her second-place ribbon at a track meet as “fake.” At some point, Momly reminds her, “Folks who try to do everything are usually avoiding one thing.” Those words ring true when an almost-tragedy strikes the household and Patty is forced to face the “thing” - the loss she feels at the death of her father - and start to trust others. She takes it upon herself to braid Maddy’s hair (as opposed to letting their adoptive mother, Momly, do it) because “ain’t no rule book for white people to know how to work with black hair.” Patty pushes Ma in her wheelchair to and from church on Sundays. While moving in with their godparents, who have adopted them both, has relieved some of the pressure, Patty is not always certain how to relinquish her role as caregiver.

After her father dies suddenly, Patty’s role in raising her younger sister Maddy grows larger as their mother gets ill and ultimately becomes a double amputee due to complications from diabetes. 11/16), Patty has been forced to grow up quickly. First introduced to readers in Ghost (rev. Intermediate, Middle School Dlouhy/Atheneum 234 pp.īack for the second leg of the Track series relay, the Defenders team has passed the baton to title character Patina, nicknamed Patty.
