![]() But as he gets to know her better, he sees a softer side. When he meets Wendy at the tutoring center, he thinks she’s an uppity snob-she can’t possibly understand his life. ![]() When he aged out of foster care in Ohio, he hopped a bus to Philly to start over, but now he’s broke, stuck taking care of his cousin’s premature baby for no pay, and finding it harder than ever to stay out of trouble. But Wendy feels that her race is more than just the color of her skin, and she takes a job tutoring at an inner-city community center to get a more diverse perspective on life. Hakiam has never lived in one place for more than a couple of years. ![]() He even objects to Wendy’s plan to attend a historically black college. Her dad, who fought his way out of the ghetto, doesn’t want her mingling with “those people.” In fact, all Wendy’s life, her father has told her how terrible “those people” are. Wendy lives in an all-white suburb of Philadelphia, where she’s always felt like the only chip in the cookie. ![]() Wendy Anderson and Hakiam Powell are at opposite ends of the spectrum-the social spectrum, the financial spectrum, the opportunity spectrum, you name it. ![]()
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