Download PDF Pride, by Ibi Zoboi
Download PDF Pride, by Ibi Zoboi
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Pride, by Ibi Zoboi
Download PDF Pride, by Ibi Zoboi
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Review
★ “This Bushwick-set, contemporary retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice tackles gentriciation, Blackness, and romance with honesty, humor, and heart. This excellent coming-of-age take on a classic belongs on all YA shelves.” (School Library Journal (starred review))★ “Stands solidly on its own while cleverly paralleling Austen’s classic… in a contemporary story about race, gentrification, and young love” (Publishers Weekly (starred review))“A razor-sharp remix of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice that deals in gentrification, racism, love, culture, and heritage, all helmed by intelligent teens in New York’s Bushwick neighborhood.” (Booklist)“[A] lively and innovative Pride and Prejudice retelling (starring a fully rounded Afro-Latinx YA character)” (The Horn Book)“Jane Austen’s piercing comedy of manners provides the ideal template for Ibi Zoboi’s shrewd, timely second novel...” (Chicago Tribune)“Brooklyn’s gentrifying Bushwick neighborhood offers the vivid backdrop for this entertaining update, adding complicating factors of cultural identity and racism to Austen’s classic tale.” (Buffalo News)Praise for AMERICAN STREET: “Mixing gritty street life with the tenderness of first love, Haitian Vodou, and family bonds, the book is at once chilling, evocative, and reaffirming.” (Publishers Weekly (starred review))Praise for AMERICAN STREET: “Filling her pages with magic, humanity, tragedy, and hope, Zoboi builds up, takes apart, and then rebuilds an unforgettable story. This book will take root in readers’ hearts.” (Kirkus Reviews (starred review))Praise for AMERICAN STREET: “Zoboi urges us to examine the American dream to see if there is room within it to hold the ones we love.” (Ebony Magazine)Praise for AMERICAN STREET: “Zoboi’s stunning debut intertwines mysticism and love with grit and violence…Fierce and beautiful.” (Booklist (starred review))
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From the Back Cover
Zuri Benitez has pride. Brooklyn pride, family pride, and pride in her Afro-Latino roots. But pride might not be enough to save her rapidly gentrifying neighborhood from becoming unrecognizable.When the wealthy Darcy family moves in across the street, Zuri wants nothing to do with their two teenage sons, even as her older sister, Janae, starts to fall for the charming Ainsley. She especially can’t stand the judgmental and arrogant Darius. Yet as Zuri and Darius are forced to find common ground, their initial dislike shifts into an unexpected understanding.But with four wild sisters pulling her in different directions, cute boy Warren vying for her attention, and college applications hovering on the horizon—Zuri fights to find her place in Bushwick’s changing landscape or lose it all.In this timely update of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice, critically acclaimed author Ibi Zoboi skillfully balances cultural identity, class, and gentrification against the heady magic of first love in her vibrant reimagining of this beloved classic.
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Product details
Hardcover: 304 pages
Publisher: Balzer + Bray (September 18, 2018)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0062564048
ISBN-13: 978-0062564047
Product Dimensions:
5.5 x 1 x 8.2 inches
Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
Average Customer Review:
4.3 out of 5 stars
84 customer reviews
Amazon Best Sellers Rank:
#24,605 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
I loved this story. While there were multiple elements of Pride and Prejudice, I enjoyed the modern twist that brought up very important issues. Our experiences and circumstances shape us in a way, whether we are trying to fit into our environment or trying to purposely stand apart from it. While we may share parts of our cultural identity with others, that doesn't always make us the same. This book took on thoughts around cultural identity, socioeconomic status, and what we think it means to be black, rich, etc. How we judge whether someone is enough, or whether they meet our standard of a cultural identity. There is also this underlying idea of accepting and being proud of who you are, but also not being afraid of change that is inevitable.Another topic I thought was beautifully handdled was the many facets of gentrification. This is a real and relevant issue, because many of us disregard what is different, or history that may not include us, yet is still so important. We tend to just want to improve things the way we think they should be improved (which is not always the best for everyone else).Which leads me to one of my favorite parts of this book, the family dynamics of the Benitez's. They celebrate their culture identity, and the history of their neighborhood. They treat neighbors as family, and truly care about others. They support each other in such a beautiful way. Honestly, the connection is just inspiring. I would definitely recommend this book!
PRIDE is short for PRIDE and PREJUDICE as IbI Zoboi has accepted a world-wide challenge to write her version of a classic. Perhaps the most famous so far is Anne Tyler's VINEGAR GIRL her take on THE TAMING OF THE SHREW.Zoboi sets her version in the Bushwick neighborhood of Brooklyn where Yuppies are changing the familiar landscape. The protagonist is Zuri Benitez who lives with her four sisters in an apartment across from a remodeled mini-mansion. A twist on our expectations is that an upper class black family is moving in, and the two boys are really handsome. Her sister, Janae, falls for Ainsley right away. Darius Darcy acts like he's too good for the girls.So . . . we know what to expect. Zuri is Elizabeth Bennett and she will eventually fall for Darius, who unbeknownst to us already likes her. She finds out for sure when they both make a college visit, she at Howard, him at Georgetown in Washington DC. His sister Gigi also goes to boarding school in Washington DC, a minor plot device. He compliments her on a poem she reads at a college hangout when she notices him in the audience.Zuri is a proud black American, and she's not about to fall for some boy just because he's rich and good-looking, and she's deeply offended when one of Darius's relatives implies exactly that. Zoboi overdoes this aspect of Zuri's personality. A boy from the projects, with whom she goes on a “not a date†says he's always wanted to “get with†one of the fat a**sed Benitez girls, and she doesn't hand him his head. It's unusual that Zuri is so touchy since Janae, the oldest, doesn't do that at all, nor do her little sisters who are just as boy crazy as a Valley girl. This could be necessary, however, as Elizabeth Bennett was notably head strong.I liked the fact that the Darcy boys were black and were still considered Yuppi invaders. We know that's the case in some black circles where a lighter shade of skin puts a person higher on the hierarchy or desirability. It's never adequately explained why the Darcy parents picked Bushwick as their new home. They had lived in a smaller house so perhaps it was a matter of affordability. The grandmother, however, lives in what sounds like an even bigger mansion.It's rather hard to keep the character's straight. One of the sisters is away at Duke, and there's also the owner of the apartment, Madrina, who teaches Zuri what sounds like voodoo. There are, after all, originally from Haiti. Zuri also has a sister named Marisol. I still don't know where she fits in the family.
It’s hard for me to rate this novel because I don’t think I’m the target demographic. However being the Janeite, that I am, with a lifelong obsession with P&P, this novel made me realize some things about Lizzy that I never had before. Zuri, isn’t the most instantly likeable character in the world- she’s bossy, a knowitall, incredibly judgmental and closed-minded, unwilling to try new things, in a way that Jane Austen never quite revealed about Elizabeth Bennet. The family, the Benitez’s is just as cringey, as the Bennett’s and overall, this is pretty accurately a YAF urban, adaptation of Pride and Prejudice.The writing of this is done in Zuri’s voice and so even when she’s being obnoxious, you get to go on the journey through the book with her. Zuri rides hard for Brooklyn and so as readers, this reads as a love letter to Brooklyn and not just Brooklyn in general, the particular section of Brooklyn where ZZ and her family are from. Zuri is somewhat of a poet, so there are a lot of poetry breaks within this novel, as poetry seems to be how the main character processes her thoughts and emotions and the poems are overall pretty good.The themes of this novel go beyond class and prejudice and perceptions and preconceived notions to address the issue of gentrification of traditionally ethnic neighborhoods and how that affects the people who live there. Another major issue in this novel is race and racial relations between black people of different socioeconomic statuses and to a lesser extent between black and white people. I think there are some pretty heavy topics covered in what is basically a YA love story that make it pretty essential reading for young people of all races in contemporary America.This was a slow starter for me as a novel. Whilst I could readily recognize the plot trajectory and characters, I found them all universally bland for the first third of the book and would have given this maybe two stars. However, I’m glad I stuck with this long enough to discover what was actually a pretty enjoyable read. It wasn’t excellent by any means, but it was at least a 3.5-star read overall and possibly even 4-stars if someone is actually in the YA demographic.
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