Kareem Between

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$18.99 US
Penguin Young Readers | G.P. Putnam's Sons Books for Young Readers
12 per carton
On sale Sep 10, 2024 | 9780593699263
Age 8-12 years
Reading Level: Lexile NP | Fountas & Pinnell Y
Sales rights: World
This heartfelt coming-of-age novel in verse tells the powerful story of a seventh-grade Syrian American boy and his struggles, big and small, as he navigates middle school.

"The exact type of book I would've loved, and needed, as a kid." — Jasmine Warga, New York Times bestselling author of and Newbery Honor recipient for Other Words for Home

**FINALIST for the NATIONAL BOOK AWARD**


Seventh grade begins, and Kareem’s already fumbled it.  

His best friend moved away, he messed up his tryout for the football team, and because of his heritage, he was voluntold to show the new kid—a Syrian refugee with a thick and embarrassing accent—around school. Just when Kareem thinks his middle school life has imploded, the hotshot QB promises to get Kareem another tryout for the squad. There’s a catch: to secure that chance, Kareem must do something he knows is wrong.

Then, like a surprise blitz, Kareem’s mom returns to Syria to help her family but can’t make it back home. If Kareem could throw a penalty flag on the fouls of his school and home life, it would be for unnecessary roughness.

Kareem is stuck between. Between countries. Between friends, between football, between parents—and between right and wrong. It’s up to him to step up, find his confidence, and navigate the beauty and hope found somewhere in the middle.
Fall 2016
Prepare to Play
The day
of the first 
school game,
the
team
marches
down
the
halls
together,
loud with laughter,
matching jerseys
filling their faces with triumph,
applause around them
as they prepare to play
while
I
flatten
my
b
o
d
y
against the lockers,
                                         moving
                                         out of their way.
All I can think
is
if I was on the team,
I wouldn’t 
be
invisible.

Stadium
It seems like everyone in 
Chesterton
comes to the first game,
the silver and red colors of 
our Bulldogs
streaked on hundreds of faces,
wide smiles,
spirits high,
arms waving,
loud voices
in the stands
chanting the
school spirit song,
the barely fall breeze of September
flowing around us.
It takes 
only one quarter
for everyone to realize
our team isn’t going to win.
Austin’s tosses fall shorter,
Coach’s yells get louder,
and the 
number of fans
in the stands
gets
smaller.
I feel like I’m rewatching
last Sunday’s game,
rewatching Jay Cutler 
get sacked five times,
rewatching Bears fans 
leaving
to 
avoid seeing
a game 
end
so low
it crushes us to the ground.

Late Fall 2016
Division
In the book
The Last Fifth Grade of Emerson Elementary
the fifth graders
don’t want their school 
shut down.
Because their class
would be
                         divi          ded.
Because when
friendships
fr      ,
classes are
lonely.
Months shuffle forward,
books my only
companions,
lessons and learning
all I do.
I hide in the library
to escape
the embarrassment
of where to sit at lunch,
but even my favorite books
don’t distract me from 
my despair.
I text Adam
about how awful
school is without him,
almost as awful as
the Bears’ season has been.
Their loss in October
against the Packers
left
a bitter taste in my mouth
that hasn’t disappeared
all of November.
                        I’m thinking
                        of switching teams, bruh.
BOOM.
My book
falls 
out from
my hand
onto the school hall floor.
Adam’s moving on
from the Bears?
From our team?

Free Agent
Adam 
and me
were more 
than friends.
We were brothers,
since kindergarten.
Before
we learned our letters,
we learned
to toss a foam football.
Back and forth
and
forth
and 
back.
Adam’s the one who 
first taught me the game,
about the Monsters of the Midway,
Da Bears.
We watched
replays,
studied Super Bowl XX
over and over,
and together,
we drew dreams
of being the next 
Super Bowl stars,
of bringing the Bears 
back to 
sweet greatness.
Adam was the lineman
to my QB,
the one who had my
back,
the encouragement in my ear
that helped me
play.
He was my link to the
game.
Like a free agent
without a team,
when Adam 
left,
my link
was
bro
         ken.
Longlisted for the National Book Award
A Junior Library Guild Selection
A Common Sense Media Selection for Families

★ "A masterfully written, deeply resonant tale." Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"A beautiful story of hope, empathy, confidence, and courage." — Teen Librarian Toolkit

"As an Arab-American and a football fan, this book spoke directly to me. It's the exact type of book I would've loved, and needed, as a kid. A perfect mix of a fun and enjoyable read, while being an important book, too." —Jasmine Warga, New York Times bestselling author of and Newbery Honor recipient for Other Words for Home

"Riveting, powerful, and soul-stirring, this is a beautifully written story of triumph amid tragedy that I know every young reader—and their adults—will love. Fresh, accessible, and compelling, middle grade at its very best!"S. K. Ali, New York Times bestselling and award-winning author

"An immersive story that captures the nuances of middle school friendships, family challenges, and the difficult realities of being “stuck” between two different worlds." Maleeha Siddiqui, acclaimed author of Barakah Beats and Any Way You Look

"Safadi cleverly weaves together spare verse creating an emotionally compelling and action-packed story." Reem Faruqi, award-winning author of Unsettled

I was moved by this tender-hearted story told in verse about Kareem, a Syrian-American boy, who dreams of playing for the NFL. Like in a game of football, Kareem’s story will pull you in with each emotion-filled play and pass — as he navigates friendships, straddles between childhood and adolescence, discovers the U.S. isn’t always a safe place for his family and people, and learns how to find his power and voice. From the sidelines, my heart raced and ached for Kareem and his family hoping all would be well when he reached the other side of the field. KAREEM BETWEEN is an important addition to middle grade literature, a new perspective we desperately need to find hope and empathy in our divided world. —Aida Salazar, award-Winning author of Ultraviolet

About

This heartfelt coming-of-age novel in verse tells the powerful story of a seventh-grade Syrian American boy and his struggles, big and small, as he navigates middle school.

"The exact type of book I would've loved, and needed, as a kid." — Jasmine Warga, New York Times bestselling author of and Newbery Honor recipient for Other Words for Home

**FINALIST for the NATIONAL BOOK AWARD**


Seventh grade begins, and Kareem’s already fumbled it.  

His best friend moved away, he messed up his tryout for the football team, and because of his heritage, he was voluntold to show the new kid—a Syrian refugee with a thick and embarrassing accent—around school. Just when Kareem thinks his middle school life has imploded, the hotshot QB promises to get Kareem another tryout for the squad. There’s a catch: to secure that chance, Kareem must do something he knows is wrong.

Then, like a surprise blitz, Kareem’s mom returns to Syria to help her family but can’t make it back home. If Kareem could throw a penalty flag on the fouls of his school and home life, it would be for unnecessary roughness.

Kareem is stuck between. Between countries. Between friends, between football, between parents—and between right and wrong. It’s up to him to step up, find his confidence, and navigate the beauty and hope found somewhere in the middle.

Excerpt

Fall 2016
Prepare to Play
The day
of the first 
school game,
the
team
marches
down
the
halls
together,
loud with laughter,
matching jerseys
filling their faces with triumph,
applause around them
as they prepare to play
while
I
flatten
my
b
o
d
y
against the lockers,
                                         moving
                                         out of their way.
All I can think
is
if I was on the team,
I wouldn’t 
be
invisible.

Stadium
It seems like everyone in 
Chesterton
comes to the first game,
the silver and red colors of 
our Bulldogs
streaked on hundreds of faces,
wide smiles,
spirits high,
arms waving,
loud voices
in the stands
chanting the
school spirit song,
the barely fall breeze of September
flowing around us.
It takes 
only one quarter
for everyone to realize
our team isn’t going to win.
Austin’s tosses fall shorter,
Coach’s yells get louder,
and the 
number of fans
in the stands
gets
smaller.
I feel like I’m rewatching
last Sunday’s game,
rewatching Jay Cutler 
get sacked five times,
rewatching Bears fans 
leaving
to 
avoid seeing
a game 
end
so low
it crushes us to the ground.

Late Fall 2016
Division
In the book
The Last Fifth Grade of Emerson Elementary
the fifth graders
don’t want their school 
shut down.
Because their class
would be
                         divi          ded.
Because when
friendships
fr      ,
classes are
lonely.
Months shuffle forward,
books my only
companions,
lessons and learning
all I do.
I hide in the library
to escape
the embarrassment
of where to sit at lunch,
but even my favorite books
don’t distract me from 
my despair.
I text Adam
about how awful
school is without him,
almost as awful as
the Bears’ season has been.
Their loss in October
against the Packers
left
a bitter taste in my mouth
that hasn’t disappeared
all of November.
                        I’m thinking
                        of switching teams, bruh.
BOOM.
My book
falls 
out from
my hand
onto the school hall floor.
Adam’s moving on
from the Bears?
From our team?

Free Agent
Adam 
and me
were more 
than friends.
We were brothers,
since kindergarten.
Before
we learned our letters,
we learned
to toss a foam football.
Back and forth
and
forth
and 
back.
Adam’s the one who 
first taught me the game,
about the Monsters of the Midway,
Da Bears.
We watched
replays,
studied Super Bowl XX
over and over,
and together,
we drew dreams
of being the next 
Super Bowl stars,
of bringing the Bears 
back to 
sweet greatness.
Adam was the lineman
to my QB,
the one who had my
back,
the encouragement in my ear
that helped me
play.
He was my link to the
game.
Like a free agent
without a team,
when Adam 
left,
my link
was
bro
         ken.

Praise

Longlisted for the National Book Award
A Junior Library Guild Selection
A Common Sense Media Selection for Families

★ "A masterfully written, deeply resonant tale." Kirkus Reviews (starred review)

"A beautiful story of hope, empathy, confidence, and courage." — Teen Librarian Toolkit

"As an Arab-American and a football fan, this book spoke directly to me. It's the exact type of book I would've loved, and needed, as a kid. A perfect mix of a fun and enjoyable read, while being an important book, too." —Jasmine Warga, New York Times bestselling author of and Newbery Honor recipient for Other Words for Home

"Riveting, powerful, and soul-stirring, this is a beautifully written story of triumph amid tragedy that I know every young reader—and their adults—will love. Fresh, accessible, and compelling, middle grade at its very best!"S. K. Ali, New York Times bestselling and award-winning author

"An immersive story that captures the nuances of middle school friendships, family challenges, and the difficult realities of being “stuck” between two different worlds." Maleeha Siddiqui, acclaimed author of Barakah Beats and Any Way You Look

"Safadi cleverly weaves together spare verse creating an emotionally compelling and action-packed story." Reem Faruqi, award-winning author of Unsettled

I was moved by this tender-hearted story told in verse about Kareem, a Syrian-American boy, who dreams of playing for the NFL. Like in a game of football, Kareem’s story will pull you in with each emotion-filled play and pass — as he navigates friendships, straddles between childhood and adolescence, discovers the U.S. isn’t always a safe place for his family and people, and learns how to find his power and voice. From the sidelines, my heart raced and ached for Kareem and his family hoping all would be well when he reached the other side of the field. KAREEM BETWEEN is an important addition to middle grade literature, a new perspective we desperately need to find hope and empathy in our divided world. —Aida Salazar, award-Winning author of Ultraviolet