7.8 /10 1 Votes
Language English Media type Print (Hardcover) Originally published 23 April 2000 Genre Young adult fiction | 3.9/5 Goodreads Publisher Penguin Group ISBN 0-399-23113-7 Country United States of America | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
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Publication date April 23, 2000 (1st edition) Pages 131 (hardcover edition) Awards Coretta Scott King Award for Authors Nominations Dorothy Canfield Fisher Children's Book Award Similar Jacqueline Woodson books, Coretta Scott King Award for Authors winners, Friendship books |
Miracle’s Boys is a young adult novel by Jacqueline Woodson featuring three young bi-racial brothers growing up without parents in New York. It won the Coretta Scott King Award in 2001.
Contents
Plot
At twenty-two years old, Ty'ree, the oldest of three brothers, is now caring for his younger siblings. Lafayette, twelve, is still grieving and blames himself for not being able to save his mother, who died from an insulin shock two years earlier; and Charlie, fifteen, has just returned from Rahway Home for Boys where he has been imprisoned for the last two years after being convicted of armed robbery. Ty'ree and Lafayette have built a stable, if quiet, relationship and are comforted by predictable daily routines. Charlie introduces an element of chaos, negativity, and hostility, to which neither of his brothers is able to relate. In response, they begin talking to each other in a way they have not been able to previously. They fear for Charlie and want to help him overcome his anger and grief. In attempting to help Charlie, they end up working through their grief together as well. The story is told almost exclusively through dialogue with little action actually taking place.
Major themes
This novel has been compared to S. E. Hinton's earlier works, both featuring streetwise orphans who seek understanding of the world through contemporary sources such as films, music and art.
Characters
Development history
Woodson wrote this novel in two locations, Whidbey Island off the coast of Seattle, Washington and in Olivebridge, NY. Her goal in writing the book was to create a work with no female characters and to explore what it's like to grow up poor. "I also wanted to write about how hard it is to lose someone you love—in this case, both parents—and how that pain starts shaping itself into other things sometimes like anger and isolation."
Publication history
Awards and nominations
Adaptations
A six-episode television series based on the novel premiered on The N in February 2005.
In 2001, the book was released as an audiobook. Actor Dule Hill, was given positive reviews for his narration due to his use of staccato, halting vocalizations which underlined the uncertainty of the characters. The abrupt delivery is then contrasted to his softer voice when speaking the memories of the boy's mother. "Hill's narrative style lends a necessary strength to this gritty story of survival in the face of enormous odds." Publishers Weekly's review also called Hill's performance 'powerful' and commends him for his delivery, which adds resonance to Woodson's message of love and hope.