Reviewed by girlinthepages on
More and more YA books are tackling important social and political issues, making diversity a priority and expanding the point of views of characters. Like it's popular predecessor The Hate U Give, Dear Martin weaves a tale from the injustices happening seemingly every day against people of color, especially by police, and crafts the narrative in a way that shows even someone who defies stereotypes can still be essentialized and racially profiled. Justyce is at the top of his class, Ivy League bound, kind, conscientious, and still despite these accolades and accomplishments is constantly kicked down by circumstances out of his control. Being inside Justyce's head was really powerful and a great lens to listen through, especially as his narrative is broken up with news transcripts, articles, classroom debates, etc. This book also showed a LOT of different perspectives in a short amount of time (such as white characters who couldn't see how their behavior was problematic, black characters who felt like they didn't know how to socialize outside of white groups since they grew up in privileged schools/areas, parents being upset about their children dating white characters, etc). The book really showed how complex and multi faceted peoples' opinions and perceptions about different races and colors was, and that insight was really important and I think makes this book one of the most unique that I've read.
Perhaps the defining trait of the novel are the letters that Justyce writes to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr., titled "Dear Martin" (hence the book title's name). Appearing at pivotal points throughout the narrative, they were extremely powerful as they showed Justyce's small yet continued realizations about his classmate's problematic behaviors and his growing frustrations with them, that eventually end in a tragedy that I don't think most readers will anticipate. The plot twist is shocking and sad, however hearing Justyce's commitment to try to embody Martin's philosophies and actions to deal with racism and evoke change even in the face of grief and trauma was really inspiring and very thoughtfully done.
Overall: Dear Martin is a thoughtful and intense novel that makes every page matter, and packs a powerful punch despite its small size. Though it tackles a lot of important, large issues, it also really sheds a light on the microaggressions and ingrained biases that people have and that Justyce has to navigate on a daily basis.This review was originally posted on Girl in the Pages
Reading updates
- Started reading
- 21 March, 2018: Finished reading
- 21 March, 2018: Reviewed