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Black Boy White School

Front Cover
47 Reviews
HarperCollins, Jan 3, 2012 - Juvenile Fiction - 256 pages

He couldn’t listen to music or talk on the phone without her jumping all over him about what they listened to up in Maine, or how they talked up in Maine, or how he better not go up to Maine and start acting ghetto.

Maine.

Anthony’s mother didn’t even know where it was until he’d shown it to her on a map, but that still didn’t stop her from acting like she was born there.

Anthony “Ant” Jones has never been outside his rough East Cleveland neighborhood when he’s given a scholarship to Belton Academy, an elite prep school in Maine. But at Belton things are far from perfect. Everyone calls him “Tony,” assumes he’s from Brooklyn, expects him to play basketball, and yet acts shocked when he fights back.

As Anthony tries to adapt to a world that will never fully accept him, he’s in for a rude awakening: Home is becoming a place where he no longer belongs.

In debut author Brian F. Walker’s hard-hitting novel about staying true to yourself, Anthony might find a way to survive at Belton, but what will it cost him?

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Review: Black Boy White School

User Review  - Shannon - Goodreads

Antony (Ant) is a boy from East Cleveland who dreams of becoming someone better than the thugs in his neighborhood who gun down his friends for no reason. Although he's scared to do it, he accepts an ... Read full review

Review: Black Boy White School

User Review  - Aime' - Goodreads

While this book deals with some really important issues and is very accessibly written, it left me wanting in some way. Perhaps it was the way it ended, but I wanted to more, more discussion, more of ... Read full review

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About the author (2012)

Brian F. Walker grew up in East Cleveland, where he ran with gangsters, drug dealers, and thugs until age fourteen, when he was sent to an elite boarding school and a world he had no way of understanding. For the past seventeen years he has taught high school English, coached basketball, and served as an admissions officer at a prep school in Weston, Massachusetts. He recently won a grant for fiction writing from the Massachusetts Cultural Council, in addition to numerous awards for playwriting, short stories, and journalism. Brian lives in Massachusetts with his wife and daughter.