“The Hate U Give” by Angie Thomas tells the story of what happens when carefully constructed and compartmented realities come crashing down over questions of justice, identity, and equality.
The book follows 16-year-old Starr Carter, who has her feet firmly planted in two different words: one foot at home in the “The Garden,” a predominately Black neighborhood, with her philosophical, former gang member father and loving but strict mother. Her other foot is squarely planted in her mostly white prep school, with her wealthy and well-meaning white boyfriend, where she is “cool by default” as one of the few Black girls enrolled there.
Unsurprisingly, “The Hate U Give” has faced challenges and calls for ban across the nation many, many times.
These two worlds do not mix — until Starr witnesses the murder of her childhood best friend, Khalil, at the hands of a police office. As the only witness, Starr is the only person who can defend her friend and her community in front of a grand jury. She is the only person who can use her voice to demand accountability.
We’ve had this book on our list of “most wanted” titles since the inception of Velshi Banned Book Club a year and a half ago. Unsurprisingly, “The Hate U Give” has faced challenges and calls for ban across the nation many, many times. Some parents and school board members have cited the book’s use of profanity while others directly condemned the book’s topics — often wrongfully attributing it as critical race theory or just anti-police writ large.
This novel holds incredible value as a key to the lived experiences of so many young people in America; it is also incredibly well-written. Thomas wields accessible, intimate language straight from the halls of your local high school like a weapon: sharp, to-the-point, and raw. Where another author might make her readers work, Thomas gives her readers the assist — distilling multi-layered concepts like cyclical poverty, insidious racist stereotypes, the concept of bravery, and code-switching with ease. This is by design.
Starr navigates her place in the halls of her high school, grapples with her first love and broken friendships in ways we’ve all seen before. Thomas masterfully uses the familiarity of these young adult tropes and a sharp first-person perspective to tell a more nuanced story, one made infinitely more complex by questions of race, tragedy, and shifting cultural viewpoints.
The way the mother of contemporary Black literature Toni Morrison described her own writing ran through my head while engrossed in “The Hate U Give” this past week. Morrison says, “It is not fast food, it is a meal that you should relish.” Now, we’re not here to counter Morrison and her yardstick for measuring literature, but it seems “The Hate U Give” is the sort of fast food that you do relish. Like, the best nachos you’ve ever had, or delicious dive-bar sliders.
The book has been heralded as one of the great young adult novels of our time, and Thomas has surely earned that distinction. While Morrison and Thomas command language and recount pivotal life moments in an entirely different way, they both tell crucial Black stories. They’re both part of the Black literary canon that defines this country.
“The Hate U Give” proves the importance of young adult novels for anyone who ever doubted the genre’s value. This frank and approachable style of storytelling won’t let any reader, regardless of background, close the covers without a much more intimate understanding of Starr, her community, and a story that very well could be real.








