35 pages • 1 hour read
Walter Dean MyersA modern alternative to SparkNotes and CliffsNotes, SuperSummary offers high-quality Study Guides with detailed chapter summaries and analysis of major themes, characters, and more.
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Content Warning: This section of the guide describes and analyzes the source text’s treatment of racism and also replicates a slur against Romani people that features in Street Love.
“Harlem is not an easy place
To grow old, and so the young
Are everywhere,
pouring from the buses, city dancing
To the rhythms of the street,
City dancing to the frantic spin of life
In the fast lane.”
“My folks are laying lines on me like
They’ve written out the part and all
I got to do is get to a place called Start
And follow the road to fame and glory—
A PhD in mucho buckology
Two point five kids and a quick apology
To the starving folks in East Ain’tGotNothingVille
While I look down from Sugar Hill and tell
Myself how phat my program is.”
Damien lives a life of privilege yet is frustrated that his parents planned his future for him. He also expresses guilt for this privilege, due to seeing the struggles of fellow Harlem residents firsthand.
“How could they know she had never possessed
Anything worth the while
Had never distributed anything except pieces of herself
Which she gave freely
To those in need, or to those who, like
Her, were broken, and needed a fix?”
Here, Junice uses wordplay to frame her mother Leslie’s selling of drugs as forgivable. Despite Leslie’s lack of money, she allegedly tried to help others.
By Walter Dean Myers