Thursday, June 30, 2016

Yaqui Delgado Wants To Kick Your Ass

Medina, M. (2013). Yaqui Delgado Wants To Kick Your Ass. Somerville, MA: Candlewick Press.
Piddy Sanchez has a lot to deal with this school year. Her best friends has moved away and seems to be to busy lately for her, she has to move because of some building structure failure, and she has to deal with the aftermath of being brutally attacked by the school bully. To add to the already agonizing list, she has no idea who her father is and nor will her mother tell her. Piddy experiences withdraw from school, family, and life in general, not to mention changing her appearance. Piddy learns to fight back, although not the way she wanted to, but ultimately the way that would end right for her.

Medina presents to the reader a well-developed first person encounter of a victim to bullying. The character of Piddy gives adolescents today an idea of what does and can happen. It provides adolescents a sense of what psychological impacts can cause them to withdraw from those around them who care. Medina makes it seem as though Piddy thought she could handle the bully when in fact she needed help desperately. She was beginning to not care about what happened to her and her future. Medina shows the readers that even if something tragic like this type of bullying did happen, you can over come it with the help of friends and family. She also show the readers that the conflict may not always resolve to plan, but will do so in a format that is suitable for the individual and the situation.

I read this book while driving home from Arkansas this past weekend and had to close the book at times to emotionally grasps what Piddy was experiencing. With bullying such a popular topic in today’s education, this book is ideal for young adults to read. It provides the victims point of view that many do not see until they are the victim. It provides a window of what emotional impact bullies have on others and what such altercations can do to someone. When finishing the last page, I turned to my husband and we discussed what we experienced in school as the minority and newbies. We both experienced situations like Piddy in a sense, both new and “fresh meat”. We discussed what entailed in our encounters and how we dealt with the bullies on our campuses. For some time the silence made me wonder what my students go through outside of my classroom. I try to be very aware of such situations and get ahold of it before it escalates, but wonder what is it I don’t see amongst them and what do they encounter outside of school.

Reviews

School Library Journal
Gr 8 Up-Piddy Sanchez seems to be in the wrong place at the wrong time. Her best friend moves away and Piddy's Mom literally has the floor pulled out from under her as the small staircase in their apartment building collapses, forcing the family to move to another part of Queens. The move does have a bonus. For the first time, Piddy will have her own room, but it comes at a price-she has to start at a new school. Her developing body is starting to attract some unwanted attention from the Latino boys in the school as well as from Yaqui Delgado. Yaqui feels that the teenager is shaking her booty and doesn't consider her a fellow Latina. Piddy's skin is too light, she doesn't have an accent, and she does well in school. The bullying escalates and Yaqui and her crew seem to have it in for Piddy and her blossoming bottom. The teenager also faces some internal struggles as she searches for information on a father she has never known or even seen. Roxanne Hernandez, a fluent Spanish speaker, pronounces the occasional Spanish words nicely and provides a great voice and tone for each character. The Latin music at the beginning and ending of each CD (Piddy is half Cuban and half Dominican) adds a cultural element. With a title that is sure to draw attention and Medina's great story (Candlewick, 2013) to back it up, this is a definite purchase.-Katie Llera, Bound Brook High School, NJ

Booklist

When Piedad “Piddy” Sanchez hears that Yaqui Delgado is going to crush her, she has no idea why she has become a target of one of the roughest girls in her new Queens school. But Yaqui tells everyone Piddy is a skank who shakes her ass when she walks, and as the bullying escalates from threats to physical attacks, Piddy finds herself living in constant fear. A strong student with a bright future at her old school, Piddy starts skipping school, and her grades nosedive. After a truly upsetting attack on Piddy is uploaded to YouTube, she realizes this isn’t a problem she can solve on her own. Medina authentically portrays the emotional rigors of bullying through Piddy’s growing sense of claustrophobic dread, and even with no shortage of loving, supportive adults on her side, there’s no easy solution. With issues of ethnic identity, class conflict, body image, and domestic violence, this could have been an overstuffed problem novel; instead, it transcends with heartfelt, truthful writing that treats the complicated roots of bullying with respect. Grades 8-11. --Krista Hutley

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