
Another character that changed was Diondra. In the beginning, she was really jealous of Raul because he was so confident in sharing his art. No one except Tanisha and her parents knew that she was good at drawing. And her dad really didn't approve. He always said that he wished that she was born a boy and that her height was wasted on her because she didn't play basketball. But, towards the end of the book, she started to become more confident with sharing her artwork and her poems. She even hung some of her art up on the wall in her class like Raul did. She also wrote a poem telling her dad that she was going to follow her dream instead of his. In the beginning, it says, "He's not too wild about my art. Mostly, he's disappointed, first off that I wasn't born a boy, and second that I don't play ball like one." And near that end in her poem she says, "It's time, Dad. Time you stop telling me who to be, how to live. This is my portrait. You choose your canvas. Let me choose mine."
In the book, setting plays a huge part in what the characters are like. For example, Tyrone. He is always scared that he is going to die, since they don't really live in a good neighborhood. And he focuses so much on when he is going to die, that he doesn't really care about school or do his school work. The setting also affects characters like Steve and Leslie. Everyone in the book feels like they don't fit in, but Steve and Leslie especially because they are white people living in a black neighborhood. People don't really like them too much because they are white. For example, when Steve tried to join Wesley and Tyrone to do a cipher for Open Mike Friday, Tyrone laughed at him. ""Boy," I said. "Sit your white butt back down before you hurt yo'self."" They aren't really taken seriously in their own neighborhood.