

She’s always dreamed of playing pro baseball just like her father, but can she really do it? Does she truly fit in with her white family? Who were her biological parents? What does it mean to be black? If she’s going to find answers, Alex has to come to terms with her adoption, her race, and the dreams she thought would always guide her. Alex begins to question who she really is.

But now, things are changing: she meets Reggie, the first black guy who’s wanted to get to know her she discovers the letters from her biological father that her adoptive parents have kept from her and her body starts to grow into a woman’s, affecting her game. Despite some teasing, being a biracial girl in a white family didn’t make much of a difference as long as she was a star on the diamond where her father-her baseball coach and a former pro player-counted on her. These facts have always been part of Alex’s life. She has always been Little Kirtridge, a stellar baseball player, just like her father. She lives in Minneapolis with her husband, son and daughter.įor as long as she can remember, sixteen-year-old Alex Kirtridge has known two things: 1. Shannon is now a professor of English and African diaspora studies at Minneapolis Community and Technical College. She is a graduate from Community High School. She was adopted by Jim and Sue Gibney about five months later, and grew up with her two (biological) brothers, Jon and Ben. But it is also something completely new: a novel that addresses identity politics in a way that. It is about a teenager breaking away from who her family wants her to be and in that sense it is a classic YA coming of age novel. Shannon Gibney was born in 1975, in Ann Arbor, Michigan. This is an unflinching and complex story about interracial adoption and identity.
