

Such a powerful, vulnerable, honest book. Perfect for teens but adults too! Everyone should experience this book. Listened to this on #audio, amazing narration. #BookspinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
Such a powerful, vulnerable, honest book. Perfect for teens but adults too! Everyone should experience this book. Listened to this on #audio, amazing narration. #BookspinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
I‘m upset with myself for having this for so long and just now reading it. To be honest, for several years I couldn‘t face hard reads because life itself is plenty hard. Anyway, this book…wow, it‘s hard to explain. Powerful but not heavy-handed, lyrical sometimes, and oh-so-believable. Just read it, ok? If you‘re like me and still haven‘t.
#September #12BooksOf2022
The first book of September I read but it just blew me away and great as an audiobook. Everyone NEEDS to read this book. The follow-up was also good but Dear Martin had the edge for me. Thanks to @Soubhiville and #AuthorAMonth for these books, would never have discovered them without this. ❤️
Day 18 #AdventRecommends September Book 2
This is one of my books of the year, thanks to #AuthorAMonth, don‘t think I would have heard about this one otherwise. @Soubhiville
I agree with Angie Thomas, this is ‘a must read‘, and is strongly recommended.
@emilyrose_x
I fell in love with author Nic Stone this morning. And got teary as I was finishing “Dear Martin.” Going into work now seems excessive. I‘m emotionally spent 🥹
Just started “Dear Martin” from having my interest peaked after reading a #Litsylove letter awhile back. This has quickly become my favorite way to watch my TBR list/pile grow like a squirrel 🌰🐿️ stashing away nuts for winter.
#DearMartin #Litsylove #TBRPile #booklover #currentlyreading
A powerful read that dives into the implicit bias against young black men. Justyce grew up in the hood, but is a straight A student at a prestigious school on the other side of the city. None of that matters when an officer aggressively misinterprets a situation, leaving Justyce to question: does it matter what he does if it doesn‘t change how the world sees him?
Cutting it really close with this month's #AuthorAMonth selection. This is good. But it's a book for kids. It still almost made me cry on the train.
@Soubhiville
#BookSpinBingo @TheAromaofBooks
And I'm going to need to pause here because I'm about to start crying on the train. This book! 😢
This little book packed an incredible punch. I couldn‘t stop until I knew what happened. #AuthorAMonth #SuperSeptember book 6/6
If you think you'd enjoy a YA novel that tackles racism and police brutality with endearing characters and persevering hope, this one's for you. If you've enjoyed Jason Reynolds and Angie Thomas, this one's for you. I enjoyed listening to this and its sequel! 👍 #AuthorAMonth @Soubhiville #Audiobook
Love that #authoramonth finds these wonderful books for me! Listened to this and loved it. Thanks @Soubhiville ❤️!
Now on to find Dear Justyce!
So glad that #AAM finally made me try Nic Stone. A really fast, well-written, timely, and impactful read. I loved Justyce, and his story is an excellent way to bring the racial injustice we continue to see today to a wide audience of readers.
The audiobook is especially good, read by one of my favorite narrators.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️1/2
I finished my #AuthorAMonth read today and thought it was well done, especially on audio! @Soubhiville
I loved this book. Glad I picked it for #AuthorAMonth What a book! Heartbreaking & heartwarming. Anger & peace. Fear & courage, violence & non-violence. Beautiful but a tearjerker. I specially loved the way it ended.4.5🌟 I am going to read the next one as well.
#bookspinbingo #AAM2022 #AAM #YA
Wow!!!! This may only be a short book but it really packs a punch, repeatedly. Had to read it in one sitting and was totally invested in the character. At times not easy reading and you fear what is coming. Definitely stares racism in the face and totally exposes the everyday effect of racism. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
#Authoramonth
2nd book read for September.
This will be a fab #AuthorAMonth, I can already tell. I need to read everything by this author. 💙
If you loved The Hate U Give, this is along that speed. Truthful, honest, but portrays kids like actual kids. I hope this is in classrooms across the country. Starting the sequel as we speak.
#AuthorAMonth this month gave me a great excuse to start listening to this which has been on my list forever and I couldn‘t put it down. I see why it‘s become such a standard! I‘m hoping to get to the sequel this month too. @Soubhiville
Dear Martin, You could be any one of us. #dearmartin #acmsreads #readingraiders
#2022Book23
This was my second time teaching this book and my students loved it just as much as I do!
Holy moly does this book pack a punch! I think everyone should read this book and take a look inside about themselves and the world around them and then ask how can I help be the change?? ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
I think this is a great book for teens/adults who are just starting to read books about race, but unfortunately, it all seemed very surface level. I expected more hard-hitting, in-depth explorations of issues surrounding race in America, but instead I got a pretty predictable and underwhelming story. I feel as though the author tried to touch on too many issues for a 210 page book – racial profiling, police violence, affirmative action ⬇️
Dear Martin and its follow-up Dear Justyce: These are both amazing, eye-opening, and heartbreaking. Both depict the social injustices that people of color (in particular, males) are faced with every.single.day. No matter what. I finished these and immediately shared with my cousin. #socialjustice #socialinjustice #nicstone #yareads #blacklivesmatter #checkyourprivilege
This book packs a punch! A student with an Ivy League future writes letters to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. as a way to work through his feelings after suffering an injustice due to racial profiling. Despite his efforts to learn wisdom from Luther's teachings, the MC struggles to make sense of a reality that gets progressively more hostile. A raw, insightful look into how it feels when you're judged by the color of your skin & not your actions.
Niavrien says thanks you, Katelyn ( @MicrobeMom ) for these lovely #allagesswap goodies! He really loved the books and candies you picked, and was especially excited about his new sketchbook! 💗📚 thanks for hosting @Chrissyreadit
These two books are powerful, heartbreaking and so pertinent to our current times. Exhausting but also hopeful. A reminder that there is still so much work to do to be a truly equal society. Wonderful characters and portrayal, Justyce and Quan will stay with me, in my heart, forever. The audiobooks were amazing!
#wwreadingchallenge #blacklivesmatter #dearmartin #dearjustyce #systemicracism #policereform #guncontrol
#2021Book30
My review of this book isn't important. I loved it, which isn't a surprise. What really matters is that I had a student who started this book accusing me of using it to push "Black Lives Matter propaganda," and ended it by saying it was the best book I've assigned them and calling first dibs on the sequel.
Read this with my book club, and it was a very visceral read for me. This book will break your heart, make you uncomfortable, and fill you with rage all in the same paragraph. ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
I loved this!! Such a brilliantly written books, with both anger-including moments and really sweet ones. This book has a lot to say in a short period of time, and it‘s worth listening to (and the audiobook is good too lol)
Sooo good! I loved every page of this. There were parts that made me want to cry, want to punch something, but all of it left me wanting to read more. 5⭐️
Trip to Target is not complete without a new book!
This book may be labeled as fiction, but it couldn't have felt more real.
Read it. Let it affect you. Then change.
5⭐
Read this gem this week. Justyce is a student at a prep school where he‘s one of a very small number of Black students. There, he thrives academically. After being unjustly detained by police, he begins writing letters to MLK, searching for wisdom to navigate his increasingly difficult world.
As a middle aged white female, I have found books like this to be helpful in understanding the experiences of people different from me.
Page 56:
Melo shifts her focus to the doorway SJ disappeared through. “So you two are a thing now?“
“What? No!“
“I saw her jump on you, Justyce.“
“It's not like that, Mel.“
Except it is, obviously.
Join in at Freda's Voice: http://www.fredasvoice.com
#Friday56 #Instagram56
Incredible and eye-opening book by Nic Stone. This book tells the story of a boy named Justyce. Justyce experiences police brutality & racism face to face, and he writes letters to Dr. MLK Jr. seeking advice and wisdom. Lots of tears while reading this one, but it helped me become more aware of the privilege I have as a white woman. While this is a YA novel, this book should and can be read by adults too.
Easily ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️/5
I read this in honor of the Martin Luther King, Jr. holiday, and had also recently read The New Jim Crow. It was fascinating to pair such well-researched nonfiction with a novel touching on many of the same issues. The book alternates between letters & narrative, as Yale-bound teen Justyce processes his experiences by writing letters to MLK. Although the ending wraps things up a little too quickly & neatly, it‘s still a timely & worthwhile read.
Starting this one today from my TBR, in honor of MLK. I feel like it‘s a good one to follow The New Jim Crow, which I finished over the weekend for a discussion yesterday.
The perfect choice for MLK weekend; highly recommend! ❤️
This is a necessary read—sad & moving, simple & sharp. Justyce writes letters to Martin Luther King, trying to figure out what‘s raging within him. He wants to keep a level head and not play into ignorance. He might like his friend SJ even though things are never really over with his sometimes girlfriend Melo— but his mom does NOT want him dating a white girl. He‘s a senior with an eye on the future. Despite the pressure, he can confide in Martin.
#12booksof2020 @andrew65
This one surprised me how much I enjoyed it. and I want to read the next one sometime.
Wow. Culture shock galore not just of where Justyce lives, but the diversity of those around him. At the beginning, he thought this is a small town where nothing bad happens. That middle twist still has me shook. Which shook Justyce as well into trying to detriment what‘s the point of being good through all this if the outcome stays the same? The letters to MLK and news pages helped the story move along well with how everyone else saw the events
Small business Saturday!!! I love driving around with family checking out new bookstores
This short book is comprised of how an honors student gets caught in gun crosshairs and end up handcuffed. Because he‘s black, the media pins everything on him. So Justyce decides to write a journal to Martin Luther King Jr.
#smallbuisnesssaturday
Justyce McAllister is a good kid, an honor student and always there to help a friend but none of that matters when a police officer arrest him with no explanation or letting Justyce tell him what‘s going on. After this traumatic experience Justyce starts writing to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and starts his “what would Martin do?” Self project.
This story is so good! I can‘t believe I waited this long to read it.
⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️