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Snitchers

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Nia Barnes is preparing to enter high school and trying to stay on her mama's good side. Life in her small Midwestern city hasn't been the same since her father's unsolved murder, driving Nia's love of detective novels and true crime stories.
When the little boy she babysits is caught in the crossfire of a drive-by shooting, Nia and her best friends Dontay and Miracle Ruth secretly set out to get him justice. They look up police reports and listen to the conversations of their elders; they try to follow suspects the way Nia's favorite teen detectives might.
But the search for truth isn't straightforward, especially when you're somewhere between being kids and adults, and people want peace but are afraid to talk.
Writer and filmmaker Stephane Dunn makes her YA debut with this endearing, heart-wrenching novel about loss, truth, and the reality of violence in communities everywhere.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 8, 2022
      Still grieving the death of her father, 14-year-old Nia Barnes, who lives in the predominantly Black small town of Train, Ind., spends her time babysitting inquisitive five-year-old Little Petey, going to church with her grandmother, or listening to gossipy Ms. Torrence recount disheartening tales of gun violence and the whippings she received as a child. Nia is running late for babysitting duty when Little Petey dies in a drive-by shooting. While the community mourns, Nia and her best friends resolve to find out who is behind his death. She uses the skills she picked up from her beloved Nancy Drew novels to gather clues, but as tensions in Train rise, she worries about being labeled a snitch (“Snitching is like when you part of the crime, and you tell to cut a deal for yourself. That’s not what this is,” Nia rationalizes to her worried friends), and the potentially harmful consequences that uncovering the truth could incur. Nia’s letters to her Palestinian pen pal, Alima, feature throughout, providing insight as she processes her guilt over Little Petey’s death. Debut author Dunn’s occasionally flat narrative voice tempers what is otherwise an adept look into contemporary social issues such as gun violence and Black-on-Black crime. Ages 12–up.

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  • OverDrive Listen audiobook

Languages

  • English

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