Ninth Grade Blues

Author:   Bruce Ingram
Publisher:   Secant Publishing
ISBN:  

9781944962340


Pages:   236
Publication Date:   15 September 2017
Recommended Age:   From 12 to 17 years
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
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Ninth Grade Blues


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Overview

Ninth Grade Blues follows four teens through the adventures and misadventures of the first year of high school. Interweaving first person stories are told by: Luke: a shy, poorly dressed boy from the wrong side of the tracks. But he has hidden talents in science -- and he is even appealing to some girls. Elly: sociable and friendly, Elly worries about getting a boy to like her. She has frizzy hair, and a few excess pounds. However, she is also a top notch student. Elly has her life mapped out, all the way through a big church wedding and a house in the suburbs. Marcus: a freshman superstar, Marcus plays football and basketball at the varsity level and has his sights on a D-I college scholarship. He worries about having to choose between the NBA and the NFL. Mia: a smart, dedicated girl who gets straight A's. Her Mexican-American parents are intent on matching her up with a nice Hispanic boy. But Mia and Luke begin studying together, and very soon, Mia develops other opinions.

Full Product Details

Author:   Bruce Ingram
Publisher:   Secant Publishing
Imprint:   Secant Publishing
Dimensions:   Width: 14.00cm , Height: 1.40cm , Length: 21.60cm
Weight:   0.292kg
ISBN:  

9781944962340


ISBN 10:   1944962344
Pages:   236
Publication Date:   15 September 2017
Recommended Age:   From 12 to 17 years
Audience:   Children/juvenile ,  Children / Juvenile
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In stock   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

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Reviews

KIRKUS REVIEW Four ninth-graders navigate demanding teachers, family conflicts, and new relationships in a debut novel for young teens. It's the first day of school for four ninth-graders. Introvert Luke dreads it. Cocky athlete Marcus can't wait to make his mark in a football game. Well-to-do Elly and hardworking Mia are eager to excel. The lives of the teens intersect in first period Honors English, and as the year progresses, all four narrate their own journeys through the highs and lows of teachers, family, friendships, and dates. Elly, a white girl, fears that she'll never have a boyfriend because she thinks she's chubby. When a first, clandestine date ends in a sloppy kiss, she worries she'll never find real romance. Luke, also white, has internalized the low expectations of those who see only his poverty and dysfunctional family. His English teacher recognizes his potential; a science instructor makes him a target of ridicule. (Ingram, an English high school teacher, doesn't sugarcoat the fact that some instructors don't belong in the profession.) Black teen Marcus, from a well-off family, is used to being admired on and off the football field and doesn't understand why his self-absorption is a turnoff. Mia, a second-generation Mexican-American, has faced prejudice and is determined to prove I belong here. A sweetly blossoming relationship between Luke, whose father is a bigot, and Mia, whose dad distrusts whites, seems destined to make them the Romeo and Juliet of the group. Ingram approaches this territory with a knowing and sympathetic eye, giving each teen an authentic voice expressed in a lively flow of alternating, journal-style chapters. (At one point Marcus muses: I can't believe Joshua's attitude, it's like he's given up on pro football. It seems like everybody I was around last week had a negative attitude. ) For gritty content, readers should look elsewhere--no sex, drugs, or binge-drinking here. But these teens' everyday interactions, doubts, and triumphs ring true, and readers should want to find out what happens to them next in Ingram's upcoming second novel, Tenth Grade Angst. An author deftly mines his own experiences as a teacher to create diverse and relatable characters facing their first year in high school.


KIRKUS REVIEW Four ninth-graders navigate demanding teachers, family conflicts, and new relationships in a debut novel for young teens. It's the first day of school for four ninth-graders. Introvert Luke dreads it. Cocky athlete Marcus can't wait to make his mark in a football game. Well-to-do Elly and hardworking Mia are eager to excel. The lives of the teens intersect in first period Honors English, and as the year progresses, all four narrate their own journeys through the highs and lows of teachers, family, friendships, and dates. Elly, a white girl, fears that she'll never have a boyfriend because she thinks she's chubby. When a first, clandestine date ends in a sloppy kiss, she worries she'll never find real romance. Luke, also white, has internalized the low expectations of those who see only his poverty and dysfunctional family. His English teacher recognizes his potential; a science instructor makes him a target of ridicule. (Ingram, an English high school teacher, doesn't sugarcoat the fact that some instructors don't belong in the profession.) Black teen Marcus, from a well-off family, is used to being admired on and off the football field and doesn't understand why his self-absorption is a turnoff. Mia, a second-generation Mexican-American, has faced prejudice and is determined to prove I belong here. A sweetly blossoming relationship between Luke, whose father is a bigot, and Mia, whose dad distrusts whites, seems destined to make them the Romeo and Juliet of the group. Ingram approaches this territory with a knowing and sympathetic eye, giving each teen an authentic voice expressed in a lively flow of alternating, journal-style chapters. (At one point Marcus muses: I can't believe Joshua's attitude, it's like he's given up on pro football. It seems like everybody I was around last week had a negative attitude. ) For gritty content, readers should look elsewhere--no sex, drugs, or binge-drinking here. But these teens' everyday interactions, doubts, and triumphs ring true, and readers should want to find out what happens to them next in Ingram's upcoming second novel, Tenth Grade Angst. An author deftly mines his own experiences as a teacher to create diverse and relatable characters facing their first year in high school.


Author Information

Bruce Ingram is a high-school English teacher and lifelong outdoorsman who has written five well-reviewed river guides set in his native Virginia. Tenth Grade Angst is his second novel.

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