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Plot Summary

Tyrell

Coe Booth
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Tyrell

Fiction | Novel | YA | Published in 2006

Plot Summary

Tyrell, a contemporary urban fiction novel for teens and adults by Coe Booth, follows Tyrell, a poor fifteen-year-old from the Bronx, in his struggle to take care of his younger brother and provide for his family after his parents fail to make enough money to pay the rent. Tyrell and his new friend Jasmine come up with a scheme to make some extra money, but pulling it off is more complicated than it appears at first glance. A sequel, Bronxwood, was published in 2011.

The story begins just after Tyrell's father, a local DJ, is thrown in prison for selling drugs. Tyrell's father is his family’s only breadwinner; after he is convicted, the family cannot pay the rent on their apartment in the projects in the Bronx. It's clear that Tyrell's family has always struggled with money, and Tyrell admits early on that he finds it hard to care about school because of the circumstances of his upbringing. Tyrell also reveals that he was assisting his father in some of his illegal activities.

With his father gone, Tyrell and his seven-year-old brother, Troy, are stuck at home with their mother, who is, in Tyrell's words, “spaced out.” Seeming incapable or unwilling to take care of her two kids, she spends her days lounging around the apartment, knowing that the family won't be able to make it long without an income. Tyrell knows this, too, but he can't do anything about the situation. Soon the family finds themselves evicted and taken in by the New York City Housing Authority's Emergency Assistance Unit, which Tyrell refers to as the EAU. It is a dirty and crowded homeless shelter where families stay as a last resort. The family takes up residence in the crowded Bennett Motel, rented out by the EAU for housing needy families. Tyrell is appalled by his new surroundings. The apartment has cockroaches, no fresh air, and looks like “a bombed-out building.”



At the Bennet Motel, Tyrell meets Jasmine. She, too, is living there with her family, coming from similarly difficult circumstances. Attracted to Jasmine, Tyrell’s feelings are complicated by his love for his girlfriend, Novisha, a sweet girl who supports him through difficult times and with whom he has planned a future. Jasmine, however, wants to be with Tyrell, and Tyrell is too confused by his new surroundings and complicated emotions to know what the right course of action is.

Desperate to clear his head and find a safer and cleaner home for his younger brother, Troy, Tyrell makes a plan to get some cash for his family, so they can return to their house in the projects and to the life they knew before their father was arrested. Unfortunately, Tyrell's options are limited. As a fifteen-year-old with few prospects and not much education, he can't just go out and get a job like kids in more affluent neighborhoods. He wonders if he'll end up following in his father's footsteps, dealing drugs. The idea makes him nervous, but he realizes it might be the only choice he has.

Fortunately, Tyrell comes up with a better idea, though it's a complicated one. He decides to throw a paid block party in an abandoned bus garage near his old neighborhood. The party would be elaborate and exclusive, held in secret – obviously, Tyrell wouldn't be able to get permits or permission from the city for an event like this. Tyrell plans to charge admission; the profits from the party would pay for his family to move out of the EAU's care and back into their own apartment.



The rest of the novel follows Tyrell through the complicated, sometimes scary work of planning this event, and keeping it low profile to avoid arousing suspicion from the local authorities. He isn't sure that his plan will work, and he has so much on the line – his brother's safety, his mother's love, and his own ability to keep himself grounded.

Coe Booth is an author from the Bronx. She has held many jobs, but the one that most inspired this novel was her work with disadvantaged children from her neighborhood and other poor boroughs of New York City, whom she coached through difficult circumstances such as addiction, poverty, and abuse. She graduated from the New School in 2005 and published Tyrell in 2006. She has written three other novels – Kendra, which follows the life of a girl in inner-city New York, Bronxwood, the sequel to Tyrell, and a middle-grade book called Kinda Like Brothers. Her work is admired for her ability to capture the minds of adolescents and for her use of street slang and language to build a believable setting for her characters.