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There's a book in my lap! |
Author: Ron Suskind
Category: I first heard about this book
two years ago. I filed it away in my mental “to read” list. I recently came
across it again, and this time I actually decided to read it.
My thoughts: This is a wonderful and
inspiring book! A Hope in the Unseen is the story of Cedric Jennings, a star
student at Washington, D.C.’s troubled Ballou High School. Being the star
student makes Cedric a target, and he is pretty much a loner there. Also,
Cedric’s father has been locked up for armed robbery and drug dealing for most
of Cedric’s life. Cedric and his mother live in a rough neighborhood where drug
dealers hang out on every corner. Before his senior year, Cedric participates
in a summer program at M.I.T. Then, he is accepted into Brown University. But his
journey does not end there. At Brown, he has to negotiate relationships with
people who come from very different backgrounds than him, and grapple with
knowledge that others have long been exposed to (Cedric had never heard of
Ellis Island before he went to Brown). But Cedric, though flawed, is not only a
fighter—he’s a survivor.
The book exposes issues of race and class
in the Ivy Leagues, and how lower-income minorities being accepted into and
enrolling in Ivy League schools can be something of a double-edged sword. It’s
a big victory, for sure, but there are some intangible roadblocks that these
students have to overcome in addition to dealing with being away from home and handling
with a rigorous courseload. So, Suskind mentions, the dropout rate among
minorities is high (I don’t know if this has changed in the 14 years that this
book has been published). Cedric absorbs all of this and fights against it.
Although Cedric makes you want to root for him,
sometimes his behavior is frustrating. He had to be a loner to survive his
rough-and-tumble high school, but he continues his behavior of solitude at
Brown, where people clearly want to get to know him. However, he manages to
make a friend, Zayd Dohrn (whose parents are none other than Bill Ayers and
Bernadine Dorhn, former members of the Weather Underground). Like I said,
Cedric is a fighter, which is very admirable. He’s powered by faith, hustle, an iron will…and more than
a little stubbornness. Cedric reminded me of Francie Nolan in A Tree Grows in
Brooklyn—she was also a tough, impoverished kid who didn’t let obstacles defeat
her (yes, I know that Francie is a fictional character). I’m glad that the story did
not end with Cedric’s acceptance to Brown, as if the acceptance itself is a
happy ending. It’s important to see the highs and lows of Cedric’s Brown
experience.
A couple of interesting things: Cedric
goes to Brown in the fall of 1995, and there’s such a sense of that time in
this book. There’s mention of SWV (who are making a comeback!), Smashing
Pumpkins, the Million Man March, Jerry Garcia’s death, and the O.J. Simpson
verdict. Also, Cedric discusses the Notorious B.I.G. with one of his fellow
students, and I recalled, with a slight jolt, that Biggie was very much alive
at this point. Also, before the first chapter, Suskind includes a quote from
Tennyson’s “Ulysses.” As I’ve mentioned before, I love a good Tennyson allusion
(or, in this case, a direct quote). So after seeing that, I knew I’d like this
book. Speaking of “Ulysses,” the last line of the poem is “To strive, to seek,
to find, and not to yield.” This, it seems, is Cedric Jennings’s mission.
Great passage: He still hears the echo
from rutted Southeast Washington and presses through gusts of thankfulness and
survivor’s guilt to figure out why he escaped when so many—who are so much like
him—did not. As he searches and learns more in classes and discussions about
the country’s immigrant past, the phrase “a hope in the unseen” continues to
resonate.
Up next: Since Cedric reminded me of
Francie Nolan, I’m rereading A Tree Grows
in Brooklyn
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