So, have you heard the one aboutโ€ฆ?

Of course you have. Youโ€™re all over social media. You know whatโ€™s going on; sometimes it feels like youโ€™ve heard it all, and maybe you have. Now in โ€œFlying Lessons & Other Stories,โ€ edited by Ellen Oh, youโ€™ll hear it from a different side.

When your family gets together, what kinds of stories do they tell about you? Are they embarrassing or funny? Do you remember them, or was this something that merely lives in family lore? And doesnโ€™t everybody have stories like that?

Says Oh, โ€œโ€ฆ no matter what, our stories are unique, just like we are.โ€ And so she presents 10 of them.

In โ€œHow to Transform an Everyday, Ordinary Hoop Courtโ€ฆโ€ a future pro basketballer will do anything to make it big. Itโ€™s his โ€œway out,โ€ even if it means spending an entire summer being ignored by men he wants to emulate. What can a Mexican boy do to get in the game?

Itโ€™s hard to ignore a story that starts like this: โ€œWhen I was sold to the Li family, my mother let Mrs. Li take me only after sheโ€™d promised that I would be taught to read.โ€ And there, โ€œThe Difficult Path,โ€ begins a journey in which words save lives.

We all endure difficult times at some point. The difference between survival and failure is in the support you get, and in โ€œThe Beans and Rice Chronicles of Isaiah Dunn,โ€ there are many in one young familyโ€™s existence, until help comes from beyond the grave.

Everyone, it seems, has that one favorite uncle whoโ€™s a total jokester. In โ€œChoctaw Bigfoot, Midnight in the Mountains,โ€ Uncle Kenneth is doing what he does best: telling a tall tale for the nieces and nephews, with a twist that only Turtle Kid knows.

And what does it feel like when youโ€™re the only one of you around? In โ€œMain Street,โ€ itโ€™s bittersweet, especially for those you leave behind in order to fit in.

Next time your extended family or neighborhood gathers, give a listen. No doubt, there are a lot of tales being told around the tables; some are funny, some are sad, some were just made up, and some are about you. Thatโ€™s what you get in โ€œFlying Lessons & Other Stories.โ€

From 10 different points of view, here are fictional tales of kids growing up with all sorts of issues that reflect a variety of cultures and communities. Itโ€™s been done on purpose: editor Ellen Oh is the cofounder of We Need Diverse Books, an organization that strives to offer books filled with characters that look like the kids whoโ€™ll read them. These quick-to-consume short stories are ones you can browse, and while nobody says you have to read them in order, one thingโ€™s for sure: youโ€™ll want to read them all.

This is a great book for preteens, although it will touch a teen, too. Grab it and share โ€” because โ€œFlying Lessons & Other Storiesโ€ is something you should be more than just hearing about.

This correspondent is a guest contributor to The Washington Informer.

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