Kwane Alexander The Crossover Book Summary

Decent Essays
The book I read was the Crossover by Kwane Alexander. The Crossover starts by the Kwane Alexander explaining how Joshua Bell and Jordan Bell two twin 12 year-old kids. Growing up they played lots of basketball and going to the rec with their dad. They both played for their school. Josh or Filthy was a 6’2 player who could dunk or shoot. As for Jordan who was a shooter whos shot was silk. Their mother was the worked at their school while their dad stayed home and watched over the house. Filthys Grandpa died of a heart-attack. When a new girl named Alexis or Miss Sweet Tea showed up at their they both instantly began to catch feelings. When they were at the rec center they saw Miss Sweet Tea shooting with her pink hyperdunks.
Later in the book

Related Documents

  • Improved Essays

    Clover Dialectical Journal

    • 1573 Words
    • 7 Pages

    At the beginning of the book it starts with a girl going to a party, but one of her friend was missing so the two girls went to find them but one never came back. One of the girls is named Summer but she ran into a man that kidnaped her. Of course she is terrified so he tried to run away. Sixteen year old Summer has a boyfriend named Lewis. She lives in a small town called Long Thorpe.…

    • 1573 Words
    • 7 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Ta-Nehisi Coates, born in West Baltimore, now residing in Brooklyn, is a national correspondent for The Atlantic. There, he writes about culture, politics, and social issues, which he also discusses in his recent novel Between the World and Me, released in 2015. Fear dominated the first thirty pages of the book as it does people’s lives. The fear could be found in the language of the streets, the school system, and in the concept and pressure of the American Dream. First of all, Coates depicted fear as prey prowling on the streets through body and language; it was shown through rage.…

    • 1149 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In 1832, a Thomas D. Rice, a white actor perform in blackface to a song and dance routine known as “Jump Jim Crow.” The Jim Crow is similar to the way the Thomas Rice’s Jim Crow of the song; singing, dancing, and jumping;or being foolish. This term like the act suggests stupid, lazy, or unpredictable people. The term "Jim Crow" is used to be hurtful and derogatory and it is used mostly to describe African Americans and sometimes of people that are considered the low life’s of society.…

    • 682 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    According to Michelle Alexander, a racial caste system is built into the fundamental structures of American society. What does she mean by this? Alexander defines a racial caste system as a structure in which “a stigmatized group [is] locked into an inferior position by law[s] and custom[s]” that determine the life changes of a racially defined group – here black Americans, particularly poor black men (Alexander, pg. 12). In stating that a racial caste system is built into the fundamental structures of American society, Alexander asserts that the foundation of American society is not individual liberal ideology, as the majority of Americans have come to expect, but rather systematic racism.…

    • 1100 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Decent Essays

    Literary essay Zil Patel The novel Ruby Holler by Sharon Creech is always getting readers to connect to the novel in almost every chapter. While you reading this book it will take you on so many adventures with Dallas and Florida. The novel takes place at this horrible orphanage with two grumpy old people that take care of the two twins. while they find a family for the two twins.…

    • 319 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Decent Essays
  • Improved Essays

    The mass incarceration of African-American males is at an all time high, and the prison-industrial complex is rife with racism and injustice. There are 5 times as many Whites using drugs than African-Americans, but African-Americans are being convicted of drug related offenses 10 times the rate of Whites. But, the real injustice starts when former convicts are released from jail and are labeled as felons. In The New Jim Crow, Michelle Alexander claims that felons show the same loss of liberty as African-Americans living under Jim Crow laws in Alabama. Felons, especially those who are African American, are treated similar to colored people under Jim Crow because of the loss of rights among felons, the stigma of former offenders in society, and…

    • 499 Words
    • 2 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Alexander focuses a chapter on the silent truth of mass incarceration of blacks across the country, attempting to compare it to the actual Jim Crow era while pointing out the differences. The parallels between the systems of control seem obvious while there are significant differences that Alexander highlights and tries to shrink, such as the assumption that Jim crow was race-based, when in fact laws were race-neutral but were set up in a way to make it seem otherwise. The argument stands with the parallel between Jim Crow and the drug war. Alexander says that laws having to do with the sale and use of drugs are supposedly “race neutral” but enforced in a “highly discriminatory fashion.” She argues that the drug war is set up to target African…

    • 721 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In her book “The New Jim Crow,” Michelle Alexander (2010) argues that elites undermined the civil rights agenda by portraying the poverty and unrest in black inner-city communities in the 1960s as the product of inferior black culture (p. 45). Alexander has a very different idea about the cause, blaming it on globalization and suburbanization, which moved jobs out of cities (p. 50-51). Conservatives, however, succeed in what Birkland (2015) calls social construction, or “selling a broad population on the definition” of a particular problem (p. 188). In building this social construction, Ronald Reagan appealed to white audiences with terms such as “welfare queens” and “predators” (Alexander, 2010, p. 48). Reagan’s terms were symbols, which Cochran and Malone (2010) note are often ambiguous, making it possible to broaden an idea by “appealing to people with diverse motivations and values” (p.…

    • 850 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Gordon Wood’s book, Revolutionary Characters: What Made the Founders Different, is a series of compiled essays and articles that the author published previously and separately. Wood then took the essays and articles and put them together within one central book and implemented an introduction, as well as an epilogue to tie the book together and support his main thesis. According to Wood, the Founders were a “unique elite” that molded a system which, overall, ensured that no one like them would likely arise again in the future of the country. The author also believes that the founding fathers were creations of the time with which they lived in and that they were necessary for the creation of the United States. He also illustrates that the founders…

    • 1184 Words
    • 5 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Great Essays

    Ruben Martinez’s Crossing Over: A Mexican Family on the Migrant Trail follows Martinez as he gathers stories from those in the village of Cherán after the death of the three Chávez brothers: Benjamin, Jaime, and Salvador. Through this, Martinez collects stories of the families in Cheran, a small village in the state of Michoacán, Mexico. Through the collection of these stories, Martinez states in the end of the first part of the novel a prophecy: the cultural hybridization of the Mexicans in the United States will lead to a browning of the America. In other words, Martinez prophesizes that the future of America holds a new culture, through the ongoing process of cultural hybridization.…

    • 2058 Words
    • 9 Pages
    Great Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Between the World and Me Book Review Ta-Nehisi Coates, an African-American writer and national correspondent for The Atlantic, published his book Between the World and Me in 2015. Ta-Nehisi Coates demonstrates a letter writing format and introduce the thesis of this book with an interview. By using his unique writing style, outstanding using of languages, and narrative form, Coates emphasizes a currently serious issue in American, which is the gap between whites and blacks. Ta-Nehisi Coates adopts a letter writing format in the book Between the World and Me to denote the awareness or racism issue. Coates begins his writing with one word “Son”, which indicates the primary audience is his son, Samori. However, Coates intends to notify…

    • 895 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Superior Essays

    Author, Sherman Alexie, in his narrative essay, “Superman and Me,” discusses how literature played a huge role in his life growing up as an Indian boy, and the power it wields in life. Alexie’s purpose is to force his audience to understand his view of inequality. He adopts an emotional and analytic tone in order to translate to his audience of society as a whole his beliefs surrounding inequality and the power of reading and writing. Alexie starts his introduction paragraph in his narrative essay with an appeal to ethos along with pathos through the description of how he and his family grew up and lived on the Spokane Indian Reservation. He describes how his family “were poor by most standards,” but how they were normally better off than…

    • 1414 Words
    • 6 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Superior Essays

    The author, Alex Haley, uses style, content, and structure to show the development of Malcolm X through his life. The author 's purpose is to engage the reader and help the reader understand the person that Malcolm X had become throughout his life. Alex Haley was told these stories by Malcolm X, and used certain situations in Malcolm X’s life to contribute to the power and beauty of the text. The author also uses imagery and certain words to convey Malcolm X’s development. Central ideas such as racial identity, segregation versus integration, and systemic oppression was an enormous part of his development and contributes to the author’s purpose.…

    • 1967 Words
    • 8 Pages
    Superior Essays
  • Improved Essays

    In his essay “The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and Me” author Sherman Alexie writes about the pleasures of reading. His thesis “My father loved books, and since I love my father with an aching devotion, I decided to love books as well” best describes the author’s position on the topic. He conveys his thesis to the readers through rhetorical devices such as ethos, pathos and logos and literary devices such as repetition as he describes his personal experiences. Sherman Alexie wrote "The Joy of Reading and Writing: Superman and Me" with the purpose of informing his readers of the challenges he faced as a young Native American boy who, by society’s standards, was not supposed to be educated. His love of books came from his love and adulation of his father.…

    • 1042 Words
    • 4 Pages
    Improved Essays
  • Improved Essays

    Juice: Movie Analysis

    • 715 Words
    • 3 Pages

    One day one of their friends gets shot, and the teens decide that they don’t get enough respect (Juice), and decide to get it by going big and commit a violent crime. Subsequently they were able to get a gun and decide to rob a store, but things take an unexpected turn when the owner of the corner store gets shot during the…

    • 715 Words
    • 3 Pages
    Improved Essays