From the Desk of Zoe Washington

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مشارکت: عنوان و توضیح کوتاه هر کتاب را ترجمه کنید این ترجمه بعد از تایید با نام شما در سایت نمایش داده خواهد شد.
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فرمت کتاب

ebook

تاریخ انتشار

2020

Lexile Score

660

Reading Level

3

ATOS

4.4

Interest Level

4-8(MG)

نویسنده

Janae Marks

شابک

9780062875884
  • اطلاعات
  • نقد و بررسی
  • دیدگاه کاربران
#۱ بچه ها Indie لیست بعدی * بهترین کتاب سال * بهترین کتابخانه عمومی شیکاگو بهترین کتاب بهترین کتاب سال * بهترین کتاب سال * Kirkus بهترین کتاب سال * انتخاب انجمن کتابخانه جوان * ادگار نامزد * چهار نقد ستاره از اولین نویسنده Janae مارکس یک داستان جذاب پر از قلب است، به عنوان یک سوال شجاع، جستجوی حقیقت و انچه که او را در چهره بزرگ مخالف است. زویی واشنگتن مطمئن نیست چی بنویسه دختری به پدری که هرگز ندیده است چه می‌گوید، تا وقتی که نامه‌اش در روز تولد دوازدهمین سالگیش برسد، و چه کسی به جرم جنایت وحشتناکی در زندان بوده است؟ جرمی که میگه هرگز مرتکب نشده مارکوس میتونه واقعا بی گناه باشه؟ زویی مصمم به کشف حقیقت ه حتی اگه معنیش این باشه که نامه هاش و تحقیقاتش رو از بقیه خانواده مخفی کنه بقیه فکر میکنن که «زوئی» نگران انجام یه کار خوب توی کاراموزی نانوایی‌ش هست و به والدینش ثابت میکنه که اون ارزش امتحان کردن برای بچه‌های شبکه غذایی رو داره اما با یه سری شیرینی پزی از یه قسمت از ذهنش، و محکومیت مارکوس به شدت به اون یکی وزن داره، این یه دستورالعملی هست که زویی نمیدونه چطوری متعادل کنه. تنها چیزی که اون میدونه حقیقت داره همه دروغ میگن «وقتی مارکوس به زوئی میگه که بی گناهه، و مادربزرگش هم موافقت میکنه، زویی شروع میکنه به یاد گرفتن از نابرابری در سیستم عدالت کیفری، و اون تصمیم میگیره که شاهد بهانه رو پیدا کنه که میتونه بی گناهی اون رو ثابت کنه. "(The Anters Weekly, «A ضد نژادپرست کودکان و یا خواندن لیست»)

نقد و بررسی

Kirkus

October 1, 2019
After receiving a letter from her incarcerated father, whom she's never met, 12-year-old Zoe sets out to prove his innocence. It's the summer before seventh grade, and aspiring pastry chef Zoe sets her sights on perfecting her baking skills to audition as a contestant on Food Network's Kids Bake Challenge. One day, she receives a letter from her father, Marcus, who was sent to prison for murder right before Zoe was born. She's never met Marcus, and her mother wants her to have nothing to do with him. So Zoe keeps the letter a secret and begins corresponding with Marcus on a regular basis. He shares his favorite songs and encourages Zoe's baking-competition dreams. When Marcus proclaims his innocence, Zoe is shocked: How could someone innocent end up in prison? With the help of her grandmother and her friend Trevor, Zoe begins to learn about systemic racism and how black people like her and Marcus are more likely to be wrongfully convicted of murder than white people. Zoe's relationship with Marcus is at the center of the novel, but her relationships with her mother, stepfather, grandmother, and Trevor are also richly conveyed. This powerful debut packs both depth and sweetness, tackling a tough topic in a sensitive, compelling way. An extraordinary, timely, must-read debut about love, family, friendship, and justice. (Fiction. 8-12)

COPYRIGHT(2019) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.



Publisher's Weekly

Starred review from November 4, 2019
On her 12th birthday, Zoe Washington receives a letter from Marcus, the biological father she’s never met, who has been serving time for murder since just before Zoe’s birth. Zoe’s mother and stepfather don’t want her in touch with Marcus, but Zoe, curious, strikes up a correspondence with the help of her maternal grandmother, who believes Marcus to be “a good person at heart.” Aspiring pastry chef Zoe grows busy as she makes up with her best friend Trevor, writes to Marcus, and interns at a family friend’s bakery, where she hopes to prove to her parents that she could compete on Food Network’s Kids Bake Challenge. When Marcus tells Zoe he is innocent, and her grandmother agrees, Zoe begins to learn about inequality in the criminal justice system, and she and Trevor set out to find the alibi witness who can prove his innocence. Debut author Marks seamlessly weaves timely discussions about institutionalized racism into this uplifting and engaging story that packs an emotional punch. Zoe is a relatable tween, with friendship and familial frustrations that will resonate with readers. Ages 8–12. Agent: Alexander Slater, Trident Media Group.



School Library Journal

January 17, 2020

Gr 4 Up-On her 12th birthday, Zoe Washington receives a letter from her birth father, Marcus, who has been in prison her entire life. He wants to get to know her, and even though she knows her mom won't like it, she writes back. In their letters they bond over a shared love of baking-Zoe is interning at a Boston-area bakery over the summer and dreams of becoming a pastry chef-and music. When Marcus dodges Zoe's questions about the crime he committed, she Googles him and is horrified to discover that he was accused of murdering a college classmate. But Marcus also claims he's innocent and that there's even a witness out there who could prove it. Zoe doesn't know what to believe-can innocent people really go to prison? In the course of researching wrongful convictions, she learns about racial bias in the prison system (Zoe and her biological parents are black, a stepfather is white) and decides to search for the alibi witness herself, even though Marcus doesn't want her to get involved. But keeping secrets from her mom quickly gets Zoe in over her head, jeopardizing her chances of obtaining the information she needs to save Marcus. This is one of only a small handful of middle grade novels to explore the experience of having a parent in prison, and the subject is handled with grace and sensitivity. It also exposes the important and timely issue of racial bias in the prison system in a way that is approachable to a middle grade audience. Zoe is a bright, compassionate protagonist for whom readers will root. She is supported by a loving family whose viewpoints differ yet who all want the best for her. The baking subplot will have readers itching to try out Zoe's recipes. VERDICT A smart, necessary, and hopeful middle grade debut that expertly balances a gentle, heartwarming tone with searing insight into systemic racism. Hand to readers who enjoyed Lisa Ramee's A Good Kind of Trouble or Kekla Magoon's The Season of Styx Malone.-Elizabeth Giles, Lubuto Library Partners, Zambia

Copyright 2020 School Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.



Booklist

Starred review from November 15, 2019
Grades 4-7 *Starred Review* This exceptionally sweet debut from Marks illustrates profound cracks in the American criminal justice system while telling an affecting story grounded in the middle-grade experience. Zoe Washington, a soon-to-be seventh-grader growing up outside Boston, is celebrating a birthday bereft of friends due to distance and betrayal, when a surprise letter from her incarcerated father arrives and throws her life into emotional disarray. The clandestine correspondence they strike up, letters and a few phone calls facilitated by her maternal grandmother, has to be kept a secret from her mother, especially once Zoe decides to investigate whether her father is truly guilty of the dreadful crime that sent him to prison before she was born. Marks tells this story of forgiveness and redemption in a way that will make sense to tween readers without being patronizing or overly complicated. The troubling ways race affects the characters?Zoe, who is Black, is subjected to microaggressions when out in public with her white stepfather and Black mother, and she questions whether her father would have been treated differently if he looked less like a typical suspect?will facilitate important conversations about racial profiling and incarceration rates for people of color. Fortunately, Marks' capable storytelling and engaging characters also combine into a wondrous confection of a book, full of heart and hope and promise.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2019, American Library Association.)




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