The Poet X
by Elizabeth Acevedo
A Dominican-American teen discovers her voice through slam poetry in this fierce, tender verse novel — one of the most decorated YA debuts of the decade.
The story
Fifteen-year-old Xiomara Batista lives in Harlem, where she feels invisible to her strict Dominican mother and hyper-visible to every man on the street. Written down, her thoughts fill a leather notebook; said aloud, they could change everything. When a new boy at school and a new teacher each invite her to use her voice, Xiomara must decide what she is willing to say — in the classroom, on the stage, and to the people she loves most. Elizabeth Acevedo's National Book Award-winning debut is a verse novel about faith, family, first love, and the courage to be heard.
Age verdict
Best for 13 and up; most powerful for 15-18.
Our take
Teacher-favored literary mentor text
What stands out
Each audience's top 3 dimensions. Out of 30 scored per book.
Kids love
- Character voice Exceptional
Xiomara's fierce-tender bilingual slam-poet voice is unmistakable from line one — singular in the way Bri's narration drives On the Come Up and Starr's drives The Hate U Give.
- Heart-punch Exceptional
Two mid-to-late scenes devastate and the emotional core lingers for days — comparable to the heart-punch tier of Inside Out & Back Again, one notch below the universal reach of Bridge to Terabithia.
Parents love
- Writing quality Exceptional
Elizabeth Acevedo is a National Poetry Slam champion and this is a National Book Award + Printz winner — the line-level craft is peer to Brown Girl Dreaming and Out of the Dust.
- Stereotype-breaker Exceptional
A curvy Afro-Latina poet protagonist, a gentle queer twin brother, and a mother who is a frustrated wannabe-nun break stereotype on four axes at once — stronger than single-axis exemplars like Ghost or The Hate U Give.
Teachers love
- Read-aloud power Exceptional
Every poem is slam-cadence — written by and for live performance — at the read-aloud peak alongside Love That Dog and the anaphoric set pieces of The Hate U Give.
- Mentor text quality Exceptional
Rough/Final draft dyads, a Medusa extended metaphor, and a bilingual paired poem furnish multiple mentor-text exemplars — in the lineage of Brown Girl Dreaming and Love That Dog as writing models.
✓ Perfect for
- • Teens navigating strict religious households
- • Readers who loved The Hate U Give or Long Way Down
- • Writers-in-training curious about slam poetry
- • Book clubs looking for rich discussion material
- • Mature reluctant readers drawn to short chunks and distinct voice
Not ideal for
Readers under 13, or families who want to avoid on-page sexual awakening, street harassment, religious conflict, or depictions of parental corporal punishment.
⚠ Heads up
At a glance
- Pages
- 357
- Chapters
- 28
- Words
- 33k
- Lexile
- 800L
- Difficulty
- Moderate
- POV
- First Person
- Illustration
- None
- Published
- 2018
- Publisher
- HarperTeen
- ISBN
- 9781432864583
Mood & style
You'll know it worked when…
Most teen readers finish in 2-5 sittings — the verse format pulls pages fast and the braided subplots make stopping difficult.
If your kid loved "The Poet X"
Matched across 30 dimensions — interest hooks, character appeal, tone, pacing, emotional core. Not by what other people bought. By what fits the same reader profile.
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by T Cooper, Allison Glock-Cooper
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The Moon Within
by Aida Salazar
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
On the Come Up
by Angie Thomas
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same emotional weight (heavy)
Almost American Girl: An Illustrated Memoir
by Robin Ha
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same pacing (measured)
Ivy Aberdeen's Letter to the World
by Ashley Herring Blake
Same genre (realistic fiction). Same tension source (identity crisis)
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