pack' mother never lowered herself to the level of her detractors, never let ignorant racial insults engage her emotionally. Unless, of course, her children were in jeopardy at which point she fought back like a boisterous "alley cat". Nonetheless, for all the painstaking effort Ruth puts into bringing up her children with values, strength and education directed towards community, James had some problems coming to
terms with the racial environment in America. He turns to drugs, petty abomination and hanging with his "punk" friends despite whippings by his mother after all else has failed. He rejects the admonishments of his older brothers when they come home from school. nada seems to reach him, but Ruth would never give up on one of her children (she knew what that was like first hand).
Instead, she sends him off to Jack's, a black Christian woman, from where James gets a taste of mankind without an education. After seeing what life is like for those with no education and no future, Jack decides to once again immerse himself in his studies and the lifestyle he achieved before his step-father had died. H also realizes his mother's interests were in his best interest because life on the street was non the one he saw when first viewing it through and through the rose-colored glasses of dissatisfied youth, "That life wasn't as punch-drunk as it looked from the outside anyway. It was ragged and cruel and I didn't neediness to end up that way, stabbed to death after an argument everywhere a bottle of wine, or shot dead by some horny dude who was trying to take my human beings" (McBride 123).
One point the book underscores is how enhancement for all macrocosm can come when people shed their differences. It also allows us to see that all ethnic groups have their good and fully grown points because all ethnic groups are comprised of people.
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