Cover Image: Anger Is a Gift

Anger Is a Gift

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Member Reviews

Moss is a sophomore who has suffered from panic attacks and anxiety since witnessing a police officer murder his father. Now, with an increased police presence bringing violence to his underfunded high school, he and his friends are organizing to push back. This book is smart, moving, painful at times, and so important. Oshiro has created a beautifully diverse and powerful cast of characters, each with something new to contribute to the conversation. He does a wonderful job of speaking to police brutality against people of color, lack of support for public schools, student activism, anxiety, and young queer love in a way that young people can connect with. "Anger is a gift. Remember that... You gotta grasp on to it, hold it tight and use it as ammunition. You use that anger to get things done instead of just stewing in it."

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I've been a fan of Mark's even since I read his reviews of Twilight, and when I heard he had written a YA novel, I couldn't wait. I teach in a school where the majority of the students are in a lower socioeconomic status. I also am the PRIDE Club advisor, so I know my students will be able to relate to Moss' story. Moss and Javier's love story was both beautiful and heartbreaking. I am rarely surprised, but an event towards the middle of the novel gutted me. I could see it happening in slow motion and couldn't look away. I can't wait to get a copy for my classroom, I know my students will love it!

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Strong and thoughtful entry into the growing body of YA literature dealing with injustice, police brutality, and protest. I particularly appreciated the diversity of characters, I know our library's patron group will as well.

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This was a very powerful and important work, but also a bit uneven. There were so many minor issues and focuses that were at war with the main theme of police brutality and outrageous prejudice. Some events and occurrences were unbelievable and almost dystopian in nature, when mimicking the reality of recent events would have been chilling enough. Ultimately, this is still a wonderfully thought provoking book from an author that shows much promise.

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I’m sweating. I feel like I’m going to have a heart attack… I’m gonna to pass out. I’m gonna throw up, piss, and shi#$ all at the same time… For anyone who has ever had a panic attack, as I have, these symptoms snowball and quickly cripple you. Moss Jefferies, the main character of Mark Oshiro’s young adult novel Anger is a Gift, has been struck with this affliction since his father’s death six years ago at the hands of an Oakland police officer. Moss is now in high school and is again witnessing injustice in the form of locker searches, which brings an incident of police brutality. This evolves into the school arming their entrance with metal detectors. What follows is both an internal struggle between Moss’s fear and his courage, and also external lessons of power, controlling the narrative, and grassroots activism.

As a high school teacher who hears it seven hours a day, Oshiro’s writing is true to the language and demeanor of teenagers. In particular, Moss is an outstandingly original character. He is witty, sensitive, and stays vulnerably true to himself throughout the book. I found Oshiro’s writing to be particularly strong in the depiction of Moss’s relationship with his mother. Their bond is one of trust, openness, and unconditional love. It was inspiring throughout.

This searing novel can bring truth to everyone who reads it: I found empathy in Moss’s experience with his anxiety. I found a sense of renewal in the strength of the several teachers who stood with the students during tragedies in the book. What truth could a young person see in this book? A parent of a teenager? A member of law enforcement? Anger is a Gift is a novel that represents an important part of the social narrative that needs to be heard.

Thank you to NetGalley, Tor Teen, Macmillan-Tor/Forge, and Mr. Oshiro for an advanced copy to review.

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I don’t know what to say. this was really raw and hard hitting. all the characters and everything feels really real and it’s so fucked up. i want to do something, change the world, make things better. this shouldn’t be a fucking reality. fuck. fuckkkkk. everything. and fuck the police. I really don't know how to articulate my feelings on this book. People should definitely read it.

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