A hope in the unseen [Elektronisk resurs] an American odyssey from the inner city to the Ivy League / Ron Suskind.
Material type: TextPublication details: New York : Broadway Books, 1999, c1998.Edition: 1st trade paperback edDescription: 1 online resource (390 p.)Subject(s):- Jennings, Cedric Lavar -- Childhood and youth
- Jennings, Cedric Lavar -- Knowledge and learning
- Frank W. Ballou Senior High School (Washington, D.C.) -- Students -- Biography
- Brown University -- Students -- Biography
- African American teenage boys -- Education -- Washington (D.C.)
- African American college students -- Biography
- 371.8/092 B 21
- LC2803.W3 S87 1999eb
- Emib/DR
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Books | Illinois Leadership Center | LC2803.W3S87 1999 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Available | 4000001310 |
Something to push against -- Don't let them hurt your children -- Rise and shine -- Skin deep -- To him who endureth -- Pretender -- Good-bye to yesterday -- Fierce intimacies -- Bill payers on parade -- Bursting heart -- Back home -- Let the colors run -- Place up ahead -- Meeting the man.
At Ballou Senior High, a crime-infested school in Washington, D.C., honor students have learned to keep their heads down. Like most inner-city kids, they know that any special attention in a place this dangerous can make you a target of violence. But Cedric Jennings will not swallow his pride, and with unwavering support from his mother, he studies and strives as if his life depends on it--and it does. The summer after his junior year, at a program for minorities at MIT, he gets a fleeting glimpse of life outside, a glimpse that turns into a face-on challenge one year later: acceptance into Brown University, an Ivy League school. At Brown, finding himself far behind most of the other freshmen, Cedric must manage a bewildering array of intellectual and social challenges. Cedric had hoped that at college he would finally find a place to fit in, but he discovers he has little in common with either the white students, many of whom come from privileged backgrounds, or the middle-class blacks. Having traveled too far to turn back, Cedric is left to rely on his faith, his intelligence, and his determination to keep alive his hope in the unseen--a future of acceptance and reward that he struggles, each day, to envision.
There are no comments on this title.