Authors: Kwame Alexander
He never looks happy.
True. I was gonna come earlier, but my mom said you needed your rest.
What I need is some real food.
True.
Pernell's an idiot. I shoulda done something.
. . .
. . .
Sorry about that tackle. I was going for the ball.
Yeah, I know. I woulda scored. We woulda won.
I don't think so.
You got booked?
Yeah, ref threw me out.
Sorry about that.
How's the stomach?
It's feeling better. The food's disgusting.
That sucks.
Yeah . . . How'd you get here?
My dad.
Really?
Yeah, he's coming to the Dallas Cup.
. . .
Sorry you can't come, Nick.
Good luck.
I'll bring you something back.
Bring me a jersey or a ball.
I'll get my dad to buy us some swag. Definitely.
Coby, you miss him a lot?
Not really. We talk all the time, and I see him every summer.
Oh.
I know it's kinda hard right now, but you'll get used to it.
. . .
Hey, Man U is playing Arsenal. Let's watch.
Can't.
Huh?
Can't watch TV, uh, right now.
Mac
You can find me hereâ
I'm
imprisoned,
trapped
by a
verbomaniac
and locked
far
from fun,
from freedom.
Will you
PLEASE bust me out?
Save me from
this madhouse of
Boredom and
Weird Words.
Bring a decent book
ASAP.
PS. Please make it a thin book with a lot of white space on the page. Thanks!
In the middle of Scrabble
the nurse comes in
to take your
blood pressure
for the third time
today.
Out of nowhere
Mom starts crying
and apologizing
for breaking up
the family
to chase
her equine dreams.
Then Dad starts
telling her
it's not her fault
and now
he's sorry
for not paying
enough attention
to her
and respecting
her career.
And then they hug
for like fifteen minutes.
While you're figuring out
the math of it all:
(Two more days in the hospital.
Probably watch 8 to 10 hours of TV a day.
For a total of 1,000 to 1,200 minutes.
Which means you have to read
at least 200 pages.
ARGGH!)
Guess who strolls in?
Ms. Hardwick?
This isn't a pigment of your imagination?
A malapropism, I remember.
Very good. How are you feeling?
I'm cured, I guess, but I can't play soccer.
I'm sorry to hear that.
I didn't have appendicitis, but I had kidney stones. It's worse. Not fun. Not fun at all.
. . .
We miss you in class.
Who is
we
?
Since you're gonna be out for a few weeks, I thought I'd bring an assignment.
. . . (Yay me!)
Mr. MacDonald said you asked for a book, and it just so happens, we recently started a new one.
The Mac is a traitor, you think.
He couldn't make it today, but he will stop by tomorrow,
she says, handing you a book called
All the Broken Pieces. I think you may find a good read here, Nicholas.
Thank you, Ms. Hardwick. I'm taking a lot of antibiotic medication, you know, so I fall asleep a lot, so I'm not sure how long it will take me to read this, you say, yawning loud so she can hear you.
Always the comedian. Nicholas, I brought someone to see you. Are you up to another visitor, or are you too sleepy?
she says, with a smirk.
You glance out of the window, wondering who it is. It's probably Mr. Mac, trying to make an entrance. Sure, you answer.
Well, then, you have a grand day, and a speedy recovery. I miss my wordsmith,
she says, winking.
You open the book, notice the number of pages, 240. Well, that's promising, you think, as your next guest saunters into the hospital room.
Hey, Nick.
Got. To. Be. A.
Sweven.
There is no way this is happening.
You must be daydreaming again.
No freakin' way.
Hi, Nick.
Uh, hi, I'm, um, April, sorry, I'm just a little stup-id. I meanâ
(And, of course, you mean
stupefied,
*
but you're too stupefied to actually say it.)
Sorry about your appendix. The whole class signed this.
She hands you a get-well card signed by everybody.
I'm sorry you can't play soccer. That must make you feel pretty, uh, irascent.
You shoot her a look of surprise.
What?! It means angry.
I know what it means.
I've been reading your dad's dictionary,
she says, smiling.
Where'd you get that?
Mr. Mac showed it to us at book club. A lot of cool words.
Wow! That's, uh, interesting. I wouldn't say it's
cool,
though.
What letter are you on?
X
.
Wow, almost finished.
I've been reading it for, like, three years.
Whoa! Tell me an X word.
Xu
.
Sounds like a
Z
.
Yeah, most of the
X
words are pronounced like that.
What does it mean?
It's the money they used in Vietnam, before the war.
Like a dollar, only a xu,
she says, and you stare at her lips way too long.
Exactly.
Well, I see Ms. Hardwick gave you the
Broken Pieces
book. It's really good.
You read it?
Yep, and, get this: the boy in the book is really good at baseball, and he's from Vietnam. You'll like it, trust me.
(Did she just say
get this
?)
Okay, well, I gotta go. Text me, let me know what you think of the book.
Uh, okay.
Bye, Nick. Get well soon, 'cause you and I have some dancing to do,
and she kisses you goodbye on the forehead more like a grandmother would, but that's not going to stop you from never washing your head. Ever.
but you give the book a chance
for obvious reasons, plus
you need to earn some minutes.
is about war
but told
by a boy
your age
who can't seem
to find peace
after a bomb
blows
his village
and his brother
to pieces.
Then a soldier
takes him
to America
where he's adopted and
just about to find out
if he's made
the baseball team
on page 54
which means
you have amassed
four hours
and thirty minutes
of nonstop
TV.
Click.
After a night
of channel surfing
and back-to-back
reruns
of
Star Trek,
the morning sun
rushes in
courtesy of the nurse
raising the blinds.
You eat gooey
fruit cocktail
and just before
you power up
your tablet,
The Mac
strolls in
with his bowling bag,
and duffel,
sporting a blue and white hoodie
that reads
putyour
FACE
ina
BOOK.
I brought you a gift,
he says, handing
you a box wrapped in gift paper.
The dragonfly box?
Well, it is a box,
he says,
plopping himself down
in the chair.
Thanks, Mr. Mac, you say, opening
the greasy, white cardboard box.
Mr. Mac, this is
KFC!
Yep, sure is. Bought you
a three-piece
chicken meal and a biscuit,
he says.
Uh, thanks, but I can't really eat
that kind of stuff yet, Mr. Mac.
Good, 'cause there's only
one piece left. Give it here.
I don't know if I'm more hungry
or tired, Nick.
. . .
I just walked from the bowling alley.
And, it was a terrible walk, 'cause I lost.
Why didn't you drive?
Lucky finally died. Had it for thirteen years.
Guess your luck ran out, Mr. Mac.
If I wasn't so tired, I'd laugh at that.
Did you get the book?
Yep, I'm reading it.
What page are you on?
Fifty-four.
Nice! Any thoughts?
Yeah, it's all poetry.
And?
It's okay.
So why're you reading it, if it's just okay?
. . .
You're reading it because April Farrow
told you to read it,
he says, and
laughs so loud,
the person in the room
behind you bangs on the wall.
So what do you think
of the main character, Matt Pin?
I kinda feel bad for him,
getting picked onâI can relate.
Getting picked on by whom?
The Mac interrupts.
His classmates.
They call him names
like
Frogface
and
Matt-the-Rat
and
Rice-Paddy
andâ
Odd names to call someone, dontcha think, Nick?
He's from Vietnam,
so the kids treat him different.
They're prejudiced, I guess.
Can't wait to find out what he does,
'cause right now he just does nothing.
What would you do, Nick?
I'd probably stand up for myself.
And then The Mac stops talking and
drifts off, staring out your window
and you're left
wide awake, thinking of
all your broken pieces.
When he wakes up
ten minutes later
The Mac
whips out
his copy,
plops down
in the vinyl chair
at the foot
of your bed,
kicks off
his white high-tops,
props both legs up,
yawns louder
than an elephant seal,
stretches,
then proceeds
to read
to you
like you're in kindergarten
and it's story time.
like he's on the mike,
rapping.
His flow is sick.
He pops his shoulders.
Bobs his head.
All while reading.
You listen.
You laugh.
You follow along.
Didn't think
you were gonna
like this
book.
Two hours later,
when The Mac lands
on the final page,
the doctors and nurses
who've lingered
and listened, and who
crowd your room,
give The Mac
a standing ovation.
Hey April,
I finished
the book.
The beginning
was a little slow
but the ending was
tight.
The poems
were cool.
The best ones were
like bombs,
and when all the right words
came together
it was like an explosion.
So good, I