Jessica’s many hats...
Jessica’s many hats...
Jessica Powers
AUTHOR • TEACHER • PUBLISHER • EDITOR
This Thing Called The Future
• Texas Institute of Letters Best Young Adult Book Award
• Kirkus Best Teen Books 2011
• Delta College 60 Years, 60 Great Books: 2011
• Bank Street‘s Best Books of the Year List, 2012
• ALA Best Fiction for Young Adults, 2012
• 2012 Paterson Prize for Books for Young People, grades 7-12
• 2011 Social Justice in Children‘s/YA Reading List
This novel takes a loving, clear-eyed look at the clash of old and new through the experience of one appealing teenager… A compassionate and moving window on a harsh world.
—Kirkus Reviews
[A] compelling, often harrowing portrait of a struggling country, where old beliefs and rituals still have power, but can’t erase the problems of the present. Readers will be fully invested in Khosi’s efforts to secure a better future.
—Publisher’s Weekly
This is a fascinating glimpse into a worldview that, while foreign to many readers, is made plausible through Khosi’s practical and conflicted perspective.—Melisa Funfsinn, The Bulletin of the Center for Children’s Books
Despite pervasive HIV and the specter of rape, as well as the restrictions on girls’ freedom that are her society’s only response, Khosi manages to find her power, refuse to be a victim, and carve out a future for herself that embraces both the modern and the traditional.
—Anita L. Burkam, The Horn Book Magazine
This is a powerfully gripping, eye-opening novel that doesn’t pull any punches, and readers will long remember Khosi and the trials and tribulations facing South Africans as they venture forth into the modern world while desperately holding onto their heritage.
—School Library Journal
[T]he tense story builds skillfully to an anguished revelation readers will want
to discuss.
—Booklist
Magic and science are woven together in this often stark story of AIDS and unrelenting poverty.
—VOYA
This Thing Called the Future is an excellent introduction to another culture and the hardships faced by young people growing up amid poverty, disease and ignorance.
—El Paso Scene
Powers seamlessly combines contemporary realism with the supernatural in this powerful and singular novel.
—Times-Union
This is a poignant story about a young woman struggling to ensure her family’s security although many factors are working against them.
—Children’s Literature
Khosi’s story is not only an everywoman story of a girl growing up, it is an allegory of all the many challenges facing South Africa and its people.
—Out Smart Magazine
This Thing Called the Future may deal with bleak topics, but there is hope and triumph, too. As Khosi looks toward that mysterious thing called the future, she believes she can make hers beautiful despite the sorrow around her.
—Christian Science Monitor
This novel offers an intimate glimpse into the challenges of being a contemporary teenage girl in South Africa.
—Chicago Tribune
Bright and responsible, Khosi is growing up with her mother, grandmother and younger sister in a community devastated by AIDS and gangsters. She’s torn between traditional beliefs and modern ambitions—and Powers, writing her second novel, makes it clear that Khosi’s circumstances permit no facile answers.
—Stanford Alumni Magazine
Khosi’s heartbreaking and redemptive coming-of-age story compels us to face the demons within cultural superstitions and choose a future that can be changed.
—Ann Angel, author of Janis Joplin: Rise Up Singing
In a literary landscape cluttered with the imagined powers of the paranormal, This Thing Called the Future introduces us to the reality that supernatural strength exists here and now. Gripping, honest, and eye-opening, this book
will change the way you see the world.
—Emily Wing Smith
J.L. Powers takes the challenges and sorrows of contemporary South Africa and renders them powerfully immediate in the character of Khosi, a girl negotiating coming of age in her post-apartheid, AIDS-ravaged country. Provocative, unvarnished, loving.
—Sarah Ellis, author of Odd Man Out and The Several Lives of Orphan Jack
Basing her story on detailed research, Powers gets into the shoes of her imagined protagonist and sensitively explores her perceptions. This is a wonderful book with which to think about contemporary South Africa – about the trials of everyday life, about dreams, witchcraft, physical danger, adolescent love, and not least about ambition.
—William Beinart, author of Twentieth-Century South Africa
A fascinating look at life in a shanty town in present day South Africa.
—The 4:00 Book Hook
[T]he research J.L. Powers did is evident in every detail. This book offers a daunting, sincere, and profoundly human view of what’s happening on the other side of the globe.
—Teen Voices
The traumas that weave through Khosi’s life and by extension many areas of South Africa are both harrowing and insightful. This Thing Called the Future is well written and researched.
—Holly Johnson, Worlds of Words Reviews
Khosi lives with her beloved grandmother Gogo, her little sister Zi, and her weekend mother in a matchbox house on the outskirts of Pietermaritzburg, South Africa. In that shantytown, it seems like somebody is dying all the time. Billboards everywhere warn of the disease of the day. Her Gogo goes to a traditional healer when there is trouble, but her mother, who works in another city and is wasting away before their eyes, refuses even to go to the doctor. She is afraid and Khosi doesn't know what it is that makes the blood come up from her choking lungs. Witchcraft? A curse? AIDS? Can Khosi take her to the doctor? Gogo asks. No, says Mama, Khosi must stay in school. Only education will save Khosi and Zi from the poverty and ignorance of the old Zulu ways.
School, though, is not bad. There is a boy her own age there, Little Man Ncobo, and she loves the color of his skin, so much darker than her own, and his blue-black lips, but he mocks her when a witch's curse, her mother's wasting sorrow, and a neighbor's accusations send her and Gogo scrambling off to the sangoma's hut in search of a healing potion.