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Alma Presses Play - Inspirational Novel for Young Adults | Perfect for Book Clubs & Teen Readers
Alma Presses Play - Inspirational Novel for Young Adults | Perfect for Book Clubs & Teen Readers

Alma Presses Play - Inspirational Novel for Young Adults | Perfect for Book Clubs & Teen Readers

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SKU:10362766

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Product Description

A lyrical novel-in-verse that takes us through the journey of coming of age in New York during the 80s.Alma's life is a series of halfways: She's half-Chinese, half-Jewish; her parents spend half the time fighting, and the other half silent; and she's halfway through becoming a woman. But as long as she can listen to her Walkman, hang out with her friends on the stoops of the Village, and ride her bike around the streets of New York, it feels like everything will be all right. Then comes the year when everything changes, and her life is overtaken by constant endings: friends move away, romances bloom and wither, her parents divorce and--just like that--her life as she knew it is over. In this world of confusing beginnings, middles, and endings, is Alma ready to press play on the soundtrack of her life?

Customer Reviews

****** - Verified Buyer

Tina Cane offers a fresh look at what it feels like to be thirteen. Alma is a New York kid living in the East Village; her world begins with her family, a Chinese mother and a Jewish father and extends outward to her block and to the wider community around her. One half of her belongs to a culture where Lunar New Year is a major holiday and the wok is always in use; the other offers her Jewish humor, bar mitzvas and knishes. Her Walkman provides the soundtrack of her life, her school presents her with mythology, which she uses just as the ancients did – to try to explain to herself what it’s all about -- and her local sweet shop offers candy for every occasion, from rooftop gab fests with her friends to hanging out on stoops, watching the neighborhood’s endless pageant.The book is written in verse, and though it reads like a narrative with a story line, there is more introspection and word play than you would find in a prose novel. The events take a backseat to what Alma feels and thinks about the events. Young readers will love Alma for her generosity of spirit, her frank appraisal of adult foibles, and her search to understand and be understood. They will also love the image of Alma riding her bike through the streets of New York with her pony tail flying, feeling free.