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When The Streets Call, Don't Answer: A Critical Thinking Tool for Young Adult Urban Youth
Contributor(s): Kenyatta, Lawrence Baba (Author), Roberts, Beth a. (Editor)
ISBN: 0974957127     ISBN-13: 9780974957128
Publisher: Batyah & Associates Publishing
OUR PRICE:   $15.15  
Product Type: Paperback - Other Formats
Published: July 2019
Qty:
Additional Information
BISAC Categories:
- Young Adult Fiction | Social Themes - Drugs, Alcohol, Substance Abuse
- Young Adult Fiction | Boys & Men
LCCN: 2019938189
Physical Information: 0.28" H x 5.5" W x 8.5" (0.35 lbs) 130 pages
 
Descriptions, Reviews, Etc.
Publisher Description:

Tyree Turner, a Detroit High School, All City All Star basketball MVP, recent University of Michigan scholarship awardee, model student, community member, son and brother, always does what is expected of him.

Raised in substance abuse treatment programs since a young boy, no one would think in a million years that Tyree would involve himself with drugs in any way. This makes him the perfect drug runner according to Uncle Tony," a local dealer who uses his video store as a front for his drug operations. In Uncle Tony's mind, the plan is perfect except Tyree would need a little convincing.

Uncle Tony has his work cut out for him if he intends to get Tyree to see things his way. The local "poster boy" for the Bureau of Substance abuse is well respected among adults, educators and peers as much as he is on the basketball court.

Uncle Tony devises a plan to manipulate Tyree into a contract using his nephew Jamal, who is also Tyree's former teammate and current classmate. When slyly offered, Tyree accepts money from Jamal not understanding that on the street, when money is accepted, it's contract that can't be broken. There is a debt to be paid.

Stuck in a situation he can't get out of, Tyree is forced into make some very serious decisions and has to accept responsibility for his choices, but to what degree? Find out in this thought provoking, emotion-packed story, where readers find themselves rooting for the protagonist with hope, praying that he makes the right choices.

In the end, readers are encouraged to place themselves in Tyree's shoes, identify traps, and suggest ways he could have avoided them. They are also challenged to apply the same to their own lives - identify their own personal traps and determine how to avoid them.

They are encouraged to take education and learning seriously and to seek viable alternatives when traditional education doesn't meet their needs or is not conducive to their growth and development - to stand strong while facing adversity and avoid drug or alcohol when dealing with frustrations.

While the target audience for this heart-felt story is young-adult, the messages within are universal. Parents, students and teachers are encouraged to read it.


Contributor Bio(s): Kenyatta, Lawrence "baba": - Lawrence "Baba" Kenyatta dedicates his adult life to working in the field of substance abuse prevention, treatment and recovery. Having witnessed first-hand the devastation that drug abuse and the drug culture and lifestyle has devastated inner-city America. As a Certified Substance abuse Therapist, Prevention Consultant and Family Life Educator, Baba has worked throughout the State of Michigan educating individuals, families and communities about the negative consequences of alcohol, tobacco and drug/substance abuse. Baba Kenyatta has prevented young people from becoming involved with drug abuse, assisted adults with overcoming their addictions and helped to restore families from drug and alcohol addiction. The founder of Real Brothers, Inc., a non-profit organization that provides after school programs for young men, Baba Kenyatta currently services young men attending Central High School, where he helps them develop positive self-esteem, self-concept, dignity, pride and encourages them to serve their communities. Lawrence Baba Kenyatta is considered an expert on the topic of male responsibility. Working with the Detroit Public School System, Baba has tutored and mentored hundreds of young Men toward achieving their educational goals circumventing the school-to-prison pipeline, redirecting them toward higher education, skilled trades and entrepreneurship. As a trained conflict resolution facilitator, Lawrence has intervened working with gangs and neighborhood rivalries to avoid conflicts and to resolve issues peacefully.Roberts, Beth a.: - "Beth "Batyah" Roberts is a Author, Publisher, Speaker and humanitarian. Her work in criminal justice has won national awards with programs she helped to establish serving populations in the largest county jail system in Michigan. It is during that time that she published her first book, "Batyah's Real Ease - One Woman's Journey Out" an autobiographical book of poems and prose about the personal experience of a mixed race child born in the sixties to a white mother who marries a man in the KKK when the child is five years old. The book details the author's life of love, hell, healing and restoration and was adopted as mandatory reading in local substance abuse treatment centers and incorporated in the jails by request from counselors working with men sentenced for domestic violence related crimes and women sentenced for street-level prostitution. Her written work helped these men learn and understand intrinsically, true love, which is not violent, and truth, which is liberating and empowering. The universal messages in the stanzas crossed all barriers, particularly religions. After presenting a piece before a large body to include multiple faith leaders from various religious sects, all stood in line to share with me how deeply her work touched them. Her work speaks to the hearts and minds of her readers, who uniquely and intimately identify with her and find solace in her words. Batyah established Batyah and Associates Publishing in 2004 to self-publish. It wasn't until she attended Full Sail University, graduating with awards, with a BS-Creative Writing for Entertainment in 2016, that she decided to publish the work of others and establish a platform for ethnic, disenfranchised writers who seek true representation of their written work in graphics and cover designs. Her first opportunity came in April 2018 when she was approached by Lawrence, Baba Kenyatta to publish his book, and here we are partaking in the first (of many) bonafide projects published by Batyah & associates publishing. Having worked with Lawrence Kenyatta in the past, seeing her own children grow up in prevention programs under his guidance, she was honored when she was asked to work with him on this project. "Once I got in and started editing, I knew it was a hit, I was becoming emotionally involved. Then, one night Baba and I were on the phone discussing the main character. Having somehow fallen in love with the boy, I saw a better outcome for him and pleaded with Baba to allow me to write a better ending where he learns his lesson and still comes out on top. Baba wasn't hearing it. He raised his voice at me and sternly said, "TYREE MADE A DECISION, HE KNEW WHAT HE WAS DOING WHEN HE MADE IT! HE HAS TO FACE THE CONSEQUENCES OF HIS DECISION! It was though we were his parents, Baba his father and I the coddling mother. The emotional involvement was the true indication that this book will definitely connect with readers, for which I am eternally grateful." The Editor/Publisher seeks to publish works that are designed to uplift and inspire humanity, with special focus on writers of color who write with for and on purpose."