By Ada De Jesús
ISBN: 978-1-55885-885-5
Format: Trade Paperback
Pages: 139
Imprint: Piñata Books
Ages: 11-16
This entertaining collection of short autobiographical pieces recalls the author’s struggles as an immigrant youth.
Eleven-year-old Ada De Jesús was on the cusp of her teens when she moved to the United States from Puerto Rico. Hurricane Hugo had just decimated the island and her father couldn’t find a job.
In Chicago, the white dress she arrived in didn’t protect her from the snow and frigid temperatures! Constantly exposed to new things, she developed a resilience that served her well. “From one place to another, like riding a bike, if you keep pedaling, you won’t fall.”
Ada discovered that students in the United States were frequently disrespectful to their teachers. At school she often felt like a two-year-old as she grappled with a completely new language. In addition to navigating a different culture, she had to deal with all the issues familiar to teenage girls: the growth of body hair, pimples, menstruation and of course boys! Her memories of first intimate encounters, fending off unwanted advances and fear of pregnancy will strike a chord with readers.
In these short vignettes recollecting her middle-school years, Ada De Jesús shares her poignant and often funny experiences as a newcomer and an adolescent. Young readers will relate to—and laugh at—her experiences; some may take heart that they too will overcome the difficulties common at this age.
“De Jesús offers honest, emotional, insightful, and sometimes-distressful vignettes in small, digestible chapters. Short, yet packing a punch.”—Kirkus Reviews
ADA DE JESÚS, a Spanish high-school teacher in Vineland, New Jersey, obtained her undergraduate degree from Rowan University and her Masters of Instructional Technology from Grand Canyon University. She lives in Hammonton, New Jersey. This is her first published book.
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