After Tupac  D Foster, Jacqueline Woodson
After Tupac  D Foster, Jacqueline Woodson
List: $28.99 | Sale: $20.29
Club: $14.49

After Tupac & D Foster

Author: Jacqueline Woodson

Narrator: Susan Rosson Spain

Unabridged: 2 hr 30 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download (DRM Protected)

Published: 07/20/2009


Synopsis

When D Foster walks into Neeka and her best friend’s lives, their world opens up. D doesn’t have a “real” mom constantly telling her what to do, and the girls envy her independence. But D wants nothing more than to feel connected, and the three girls form a tight bond—and a passion for the music of Tupac Shakur. D’s the one who understands Tupac’s songs best, and through her, his lyrics become more personal for all of them.After Tupac is shot the first time, the girls are awed by how he comes back stronger than ever. And seeing how Tupac keeps on keeping on helps when Neeka’s brother is wrongly sent to jail and D’s absent mom keeps disappointing. But by the time Tupac is shot again, the girls have turned thirteen and everything’s changed, except their belief in finding their Big Purpose.Newbery Honor winner Jacqueline Woodson’s compelling and inspiring story shows us how music touches our lives, how much life can be lived in a short time, and how all—too—brief connections can touch us to the core and remain a part of us forever.

About Jacqueline Woodson

Jacqueline Woodson, winner of the Margaret A. Edwards Award for lifetime achievement in writing for young adults, is the author of Feathers, Newbery Honor winner Show Way, Miracle’s Boys (recipient of a Coretta Scott King Award and a Los Angeles Times Book Prize), Locomotion and Hush (both National Book Award finalists), among many others. She lives in Brooklyn, New York.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Betsy on February 16, 2008

Some authors make writing reviews easy. You pick up their book, glance at the cover, and the words pour out of you like a hard spring rain. Jacqueline Woodson is not one of those authors, and this is not a bad thing. Her books are deep little critters. Their surface concerns hint at fuller depths. H......more

Goodreads review by Richard on July 07, 2008

Not so good, even for teens. Woodson tries to sell us the Tupac part, without the Tupac. The reader is duped here. There are none of his rhymes, and nothing to really grab onto here. If she came back with a new addition, adding some character, plot, and setting "meat," I believe we may have a winner......more

Goodreads review by Steve on January 05, 2021

A neat glimpse into a world I don't get into as an Alaskan white guy.......more

Goodreads review by Jackson on July 13, 2012

This book was so beautiful. I would definitely say that it's the best realistic fiction I've read in a long time. Woodson beautifully weaves together several different stories into one in a way that the stories parallel each other but are each important in their own ways but they all come together as......more