Fallen Angels

by

Walter Dean Myers

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on Fallen Angels makes teaching easy.
Richie Perry and Kenny’s mother, Mama has raised her boys on her own since their father abandoned the family while Perry was still young. She turned to alcohol to cope, and her drinking problem forced Perry to take on more responsibilities from a young age. As with Kenny, letters between Perry and Mama provide Perry opportunities to think about how he’s growing up in Vietnam.

Mama Quotes in Fallen Angels

The Fallen Angels quotes below are all either spoken by Mama or refer to Mama. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
War, Trauma, and Dehumanization Theme Icon
).
Chapter 14 Quotes

I had come into the army at seventeen, and I remembered who I was, and who I was had been a kid. The war hadn’t meant anything to me then, maybe because I had never gone through anything like it before. All I had thought about combat was that I would never die, that our side would win, and that we would all go home somehow satisfied. And now all the dying around me, and all the killing, was making me look at myself again, hoping to find something more than the kid I was. Maybe I could sift through the kid’s stuff, the basketball, the Harlem streets, and find the man I would be. I hoped I did it before I got killed.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Kenny, Mama
Page Number: 187
Explanation and Analysis:
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Fallen Angels PDF

Mama Quotes in Fallen Angels

The Fallen Angels quotes below are all either spoken by Mama or refer to Mama. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
War, Trauma, and Dehumanization Theme Icon
).
Chapter 14 Quotes

I had come into the army at seventeen, and I remembered who I was, and who I was had been a kid. The war hadn’t meant anything to me then, maybe because I had never gone through anything like it before. All I had thought about combat was that I would never die, that our side would win, and that we would all go home somehow satisfied. And now all the dying around me, and all the killing, was making me look at myself again, hoping to find something more than the kid I was. Maybe I could sift through the kid’s stuff, the basketball, the Harlem streets, and find the man I would be. I hoped I did it before I got killed.

Related Characters: Richie Perry (speaker), Kenny, Mama
Page Number: 187
Explanation and Analysis: