Archives for April2011


This Thing Called the Future Kirkus Book Review, April 15, 2011

This Thing Called the Future by J.L. Powers

Set in an impoverished South African shantytown where post-Apartheid freedom is overshadowed by rampant AIDS and intractable poverty, this novel takes a loving, clear-eyed look at the clash of old and new through the experience of one appealing teenager. Khosi, 14, lives in an all-female household with her sister, Zi, and frail grandmother, Gogo, subsisting on Gogo’s pension and Mama’s salary as a teacher in the city (she comes home on weekends). Everyone in Khosi’s world is poor. Where the struggle to survive is all-consuming, family loyalty trumps community. Clashes between Zulu customs and contemporary values further erode cultural ties and divide families. A scholarship student, Khosi loves science, but getting to school means dodging gangs and rapists hunting AIDS-free virgins. After a witch curses Khosi’s family and Mama falls ill, Khosi and Gogo seek aid from a traditional Zulu healer, which Mama dismisses as superstition while fear and poverty keep her from accessing modern medicine. As stresses mount, Khosi’s ancestors speak, offering her guidance. Supported by them, her family and classmate Little Man, Khosi vows to create a better future by synthesizing old and new ways, yet the obstacles she faces—some inherited, others newly acquired—are staggering. A compassionate and moving window on a harsh world. (glossary of Zulu words) (Paranormal fiction. 12 & up)

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Interview at Through the Tollbooth

Read an interview with J.L. Powers at Through the Tollbooth!

Q: What about this novel makes you most proud?

There is absolutely nothing on the market like it! It is young adult magical realism, set in a poverty-stricken township of South Africa. It is a love story but it also deals with the clash between science and traditional medicine in Africa, and it highlights and focuses on the HIV-AIDS epidemic in the part of the world with the highest rate of HIV infections—the heart of the epidemic.

 Read more…

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Goodreads book giveaway of This Thing Called the Future

Goodreads Book Giveaway

This Thing Called the Future by J.L. Powers

This Thing Called the Future

by J.L. Powers

Giveaway ends May 28, 2011.

See the giveaway details
at Goodreads.

Enter to win

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Thanks, Liz Taylor

It’s true, I’m almost a month late, but I did want to say thanks to Liz Taylor, a heroine to the HIV-AIDS community. Long before other Hollywood stars would publicly associate themselves with HIV-AIDS, she did, and created an important foundation to boot. Rest in Peace.

Elizabeth Taylor, February 27, 1932 – March 23, 2011

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The Pirate Tree: Social Justice and Children’s Literature


Announcing the launch of The Pirate Tree, a blog with 5 award-winning children’s and young adult writers–Ann Angel, Nancy Bo Flood, Lyn Miller-Lachmann, Peter Marino, and J.L. Powers. We’ll be discussing social justice issues and children’s literature on Tuesdays and Thursdays. Come join us!

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