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A captivating tale, written with fluid narrative and contemporary dialect, Flyy Girl captures the complete feel and sounds of the streets and is destined to become an urban classic.
At the heart of this morality tale is Tracy Ellison, a young girl whose adolescence and teenage years are depicted largely as a monotonous soap opera. The daughter of hardworking parents, Tracy lives in Germantown, a middle-class neighborhood, and does well in school. Her problems stem mainly from boys, and for most of her young life, she's truly boy-crazy. So much so, that this overlong narrative records in dull detail her years of flirting, courting, kissing, and having sex—"a game of choosing and chasing and dumping." By 13, she's tall, curvaceous, and cunning; she "had to have whomever she wanted right away." That includes a wide range of eager young men, from the awkward and fumbling Bruce to the violent thief Timmy. With time, Tracy learns not to give it out without getting things in return, even though her behavior shocks her lifelong neighbor, Raheema, a studious girl who postpones her deflowering. What finally turns Tracy around, though, is the sad example of Raheema's older sister, who has become a crack whore. In this tightly ordered universe, bad living leads to addiction, unwanted pregnancy, jail, or death. Tracy also comes under the influence of some college girls who introduce her to the world of Kente cloth and the Minister Farrakhan.
Tyree's shapeless docudrama seems written for an audience he intends to shock—why else would he pause so often (and so awkwardly) to translate slang terms that any watcher of Moesha would know? But for all its immoral behavior, it's a cautionary of the most heavy-handed sort: virtue rewarded; vice punished.
"Happy birthday toooo you. Happy birthday toooo you. Happy bir-r-rth-day dear Tra-a-a-a-cy . . . Happy birthday toooo you," the crowd of sixteen children sang, helped along by some of the parents who were present.
It was Sunday afternoon in Tracy's sixth year of life, nineteen-seventy-seven. She sat proudly on her father's lap at the table in front of her birthday cake. She cracked a broad smile in her cute red dress. Her newly tied ponytail dangled down her neck. Her hazel eyes enlarged as her daddy helped her to cut the two-layer cake while the other children watched excitedly, all wishing that it was their birthday.
Tracy's daddy, Dave Ellison, was deep cocoa-brown and hazel-eyed and had the lean figure of a trained athlete. He was a youthful twenty-nine-year-old, possessing the boyish face of a teen. Dave wore no mustache or beard, obeying his self-imposed hygiene regulation. He believed that his clean-shaven face presented a healthy and professional appearance at the hospital where he worked as a pharmacist.
Tracy's smooth, honey-brown skin was exactly half the richness of her father's tone. She had inherited his light-colored eyes along with the almond shape and long eyelashes of her mother, Patti. Tracy's eyes seemed to glimmer whenever the sun hit them, making them sparkle like a cat's eyes. She was average height for her age, not standing out among the other kids. But her daddy was tall, and her mother was no midget herself. Patti had inherited a considerable amount of height from her father, Jason Smith, who had died in a car crash a year ago. So Tracy, it seemed, was destined to be tall.
Tracy's cousins had always envied the attention she received. For her birthday, she received presents and money from all of her guests and relatives. Her aunts bought her new clothing and shoes that her cousins wished they could have. All but two of her six cousins were older than she was.
Patti, matching her daughter and wearing red herself, bought Tracy a pink Mickey Mouse watch. Dave gave her a small gold ring.
Most of the parents sat around eating ice cream and cake and watching the television set inside of the kitchen. Their kids played board games in the Ellison's large, finely decorated basement.
The kids began to scream and yell once Patti decided to put on a VCR movie. The 27-inch, floor-model, color television set was a brand new RCA. Dave had bought it a week before the party. He had moved the old, 19-inch Sony, with stand, into Tracy's room. Her cousins envied that, too.
Out of four sisters, Tracy's mother Patti had captured the best man. And Patti had been considered the prettiest sister since their youth, with her light skin, curvaceous body and dark, almond-shaped eyes.
Dave was definitely a catch. His high income enabled them to move into a comfortable and scenic black neighborhood in Northwest Philadelphia. In Germantown, they had the luxury of private lawns, patios, driveways and lots of trees, which surrounded their three-bedroom twin-house, things not affordable to the many Philadelphians who lived in crowded row-house areas. Patti worked at a nursing home as a dietitian, adding to their snug income.
So far, Tracy was their only child. Dave was an only child himself. Patti's three sisters each had two children.
Tracy fought with her cousins constantly. At most of their family gatherings, her mother and aunts tried unsuccessfully to keep them apart. Their unruly children could destroy an entire party with infighting. They had done it many times before.
The kids, ten girls and six boys, including Kamar, Tracy's only boy cousin, watched Cinderella. The girls were having more fun than the boys, who would have rather watched Dumbo. But it was Tracy's party, and she wanted to see Cinderella first.
The children spilled juice on the rug, left crumbs on the tables and got melted ice cream all over their bodies. Patti ran behind them, cleaning up to keep the house neat and pretty.
There were carpets in every room except for the kitchen, which had new blue and white tile floors. And when Patti finally gave up trying to salvage what was left of her clean house, she went and sat in her large kitchen with her sisters and the rest of the parents.
"Girl, this house is just beautiful," a parent said enthusiastically, as though the house had energized her.
"Yeah, girl, you just don't know how much we put into this house,'' Patti quickly responded, trying to be modest.
"Well, if my man had some money, I could've had a house like this, too," Patti's younger sister Tanya said. She stood inside the kitchen entrance leaning up against the wall. Tanya was well-curved herself, wearing a royal blue shirt and pants set with black shoes.
"Unh hunh, that's why I love to visit, just to be in this house," Patti's youngest sister Joy said with a giggle. "This feels better than being in the hospital." Joy was considered the silly sister. She was on the thin side, wearing an off-white dress and sitting in one of the kitchen chairs.
"See, I told you years ago, Joy, that that boy you was dating didn't have no sense. But you wouldn't listen," Marsha, the oldest sister, commented. Marsha was heavy-set and mean. She wore a wide, black, skimpy dress. She kept pulling it down over her hips under the kitchen table.
You need to stop trying to look cute in them tacky-ass outfits you wear, Patti thought to herself of her older sister.
"Look who's talkin," Joy responded to Marsha while slicing a piece of cake. "You ain't got nothin' better than what I got."
"Well, that's only because the nigga left me. But I gots more, honey. "
Patti began to feel uncomfortable, predicting where her sisters' conversation was headed. "Come on now, every time we get together we talk about the same-o-same-o. Now, this is supposed to be my daughter's party, so let's act like it," she told them.
"Aw, girl, listen to you," Marsha snapped. "You gon' get yourself a little college boy with some money, and then gon' tell us not to be jealous. "
"Now hold on, one minute," Patti responded. "Don't start this dumb stuff tonight, Marsha, 'cause I'm sick of it. You can leave my house with all that."
Marsha shook angrily while trying to lift herself from the kitchen chair. "Fine! I ain't gotta stay here for this boring-ass party any-damn-way."
The parents, standing inside of the kitchen and the dining room, began to feel embarrassed. They all appeared as though they weren't listening to the argument, but they were.
"You know what, Marsha? This is it! If you can't show me any respect in my house, then you don't need to come here anymore. There's no reason for you to be acting like this toward me, or the rest of us."
"Fine, sista', you said it," Marsha huffed. She jumped on the phone and called a taxi. She then got her coat and rumbled to the basement door to call her two daughters.
"Trish and Marie, get your things, 'cause we goin' home!"
"No, I'll take them home," Joy interjected. "Ain't no sense in them being punished just because you can't get along."
Marsha looked offended. "Look, dammit, my girls came here with me and they gonna leave with me!"
Copyright © 1993, 1996 by Omar Tyree
kimuhhify
Posted April 14, 2011
this book was just okay. the dialogue was flat and hard to get through. i normally read books in less than a day but this took me 2 weeks to finish. i wish i could get a refund.
3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.1LilMomma
Posted January 18, 2011
This book was so boring that after reading 169 pages I just skipped to the last chapter to get it over with. This is the 2nd book that I've attempted to read by this author so obviously I won't be reading any more!
3 out of 4 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 18, 2011
A very good book for a growing young lady,finally a book to laugh and learn about life. This one i couldn't let go of until I was done. Thank you Mr. Tyree!
2 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I am from Philly and in reading the book, I was able to picture everything that the author was saying and describing. I live in cali now and when I am homesick, I can refer back to that book. He captures the very essence of a Philly attitude in teenagers.
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.I read this book when i was 13 years old,i'm now 19 and i still read it over and over. This book truly is what ever african amercan girl goes through growing up!! But it also very universal.anyway i still can't belive a man wrote this,omar tyree was on point,and i think every young girl should read this,this book is whats up for real!!!
2 out of 3 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted September 25, 2010
This book is about a little girl named Tracy growing up in the 80's. I like the evolution that the character under goes through out the story. And it touches on the good and bad side of life. Not everything in reality comes out good. The book is a little to long for me. I feel like somethiings could have been left out. But all in all it was a nice book to read. I liked it.
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.WOW..
THIS BOOK WAS GREAT!
I LOVE IT SOOO MUUCH! I COULD NOT EVEN PUT IT DOWN!!!
I LOVED IT!
YOU REALLY SHOULD READ THIS BOOK,
IT WILL HAVE YOU SAYIN O NO SHE DIDNT THROUGH THE WHOLE BOOK!
IF YOU LIKED THIS BOOK,
YOU WILL ALSO LIKE,
THE COLDEST WINTER EVER & NASTY GIRLS!
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted October 8, 2008
I absolutely adored this book. My older sister was reading it a couple years ago and I found it one day and secretly started reading it. After two days when I was well into the book, my sister found out and to my surprise, let me continue reading it. We would stay up late discussing this intriguing story. Now that I am a little older and can understand the book a little better I plan to read it again. I remember not being able to stop reading and had to (almost literally) be pulled away from it. I would recommend this book to anyone (but it does get kind of explicit at times).
1 out of 2 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted May 27, 2008
The book started off slow got good in the middle then nothing else happened. The only reason why i think people said it was good was because how fast tracy was. This book is nothing compared to the coldest winter ever!!! if anyone knows of a book as good as the coldest winter ever please hit me up!!!
1 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted May 13, 2012
Im so glad to have read this book when i was a teen, it kept me from making some mistakes, every teen girl growing up in an urban neighbirhood shoulf read this.
Anonymous
Posted May 10, 2012
It is perfect
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.pink_elephant
Posted February 29, 2012
*This book stinks. The first smutty scene described was of a thirteen year old. Not only was that disturbing, but on the same page (34 on ebook) he detailed something specific about it, he completely forgot, and re-described it the opposite. All of the female characters mimic one another, and in the first chapter alone there are loads of unnecessary quarrels that come out of nowhere with no build up. Just about all of them are eager to be mean for no reason. To make matters worse he repeatedly spelled uh uh, shut up, and uh huh wrong! This book is for idiot teens who are happy to say they read something. It is so over-rated, and I'm disgusted with myself for wasting 7 bucks on all the hype. I can think of about a dozen other things I could've done with it.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted February 22, 2012
This book was not so interesting. Its no climax yet and im on page 200..
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Posted December 30, 2011
I read this book back in 01 when it came out it was the first novel i read...i was about 14...this book is what sparked my crave to read more! Great Read and the follow up books are awesome as well
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted December 9, 2011
This book was okay. Probably better for youunger readers.
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.prettynpink25
Posted September 25, 2011
I read dis book years ago and it was truly an page turner!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted September 12, 2011
This is my first and last time reading a novel by Omar Tyree. I always finish what I start but this is one book that I could no longer bear to read. DO NOT BUY THIS BOOK. If you really want to read it, borrow it from the library.
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted August 7, 2011
I totally love this book. I feel bad for the girl how her parents slit up that way her dad couldn't handle having a great family...
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.OMG! WHERE DO I BEGIN?? THIS BOOK WAS BEYOND BORING. IT HAD NO PLOT AND NO PURPOSE. I HAVE NO CLUE HOW A BOOK CAN BE SO OVERRATED! PPL WERE TELLING OH THE BOOK IS GOOD. WHEN I FIRST STARTED READING I WAS COMPLAINING BCUZ THE BOOK HAS OVER 400 PAGES AND BY PAGE 189 IT STILL DID NOT GET INTERESTING. I WANTED SO BADLY TO PUT IT DOWN BUT I KEPT READING ONLY TO FIND THAT THERE WAS NO MOMENT OF HYPE. THIS IS HONESTLY THE WORST BOOK I HAVE EVER READ. AND I READ OVER 5 BOOKS A MONTH. THIS WILL DEFINITELY BE MY FIRST AND LAST BOOK BY OMAR TYREE. IT WAS LIKE EVERY TIME YOU THOUGHT SOMETHING WAS GONNA JUMP OFF IT TURNED OUT TO BE NOTHING!!!! TRACY'S MOM AND DAD HAD BEEF WITH EACH OTHER FOR REASONS NOT CLEAR ENOUGH. I AM STILL CONFUSED AS TO WHY HER DAD WAS THE WAY HE WAS DESPITE THE BRIEF REASON STATED AT THE END BETWEEN TRACY AND HER DAD. THIS BOOK IS SEVERLY UNDERDEVELOPED. THERE WERE SO MANY OTHER THINGS THAT COULD HAVE AND SHOULD HAVE TAKEN PLACE TO MAKE THE BOOK INTERESTING. THIS BOOK WAS SO UNDER MY LEVEL THAT I WAS UPSET WITH MYSELF FOR BUYING IT. I AM USED TO GOOD BOOKS BY NOIRE, CARL WEBER, ANNA J, ASHLEY ANTOINETTE, ASHLEY & JAQUAVIS, JAQUAVIS COLEMAN, KEITH LEE JOHNSON, MEESHA MINK & DE'NESHA DIAMOND. OMG THIS BOOK IS A TRIP. I FEEL LIKE I'VE BEEN HAD. 400 PAGES OF TRASH. I'M TALKING BELOW POVERTY LEVEL TRASH!!!!!! UGGHHH I GIVE UP!!
Was this review helpful? Yes NoThank you for your feedback. Report this reviewThank you, this review has been flagged.Anonymous
Posted May 25, 2011
This book is absolutley a 'page turner'. A MUSTBREAD!!!
0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.
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Overview
From a fresh new voice with talent to burn comes this brash bitter sweet novel about Tracy Ellison, a young girl with knockout looks, slanted hazel eyes, tall hair, and attitude, as she comes of age during the hip-hop era. Motivated by the material life, Tracy, her friends, and the young men who will do anything to get next to them are plunged into a world of violence, gratuitous sex, and heartbreak. Slowly, Tracy begins to examine her life, her goals, and her sexuality—as she evolves from a Flyy Girl into a woman.
A captivating tale, written with fluid narrative and contemporary dialect, Flyy Girl captures the complete feel and sounds of the streets ...