On the Come Up

by

Angie Thomas

Teachers and parents! Our Teacher Edition on On the Come Up makes teaching easy.

Trey Character Analysis

Bri's 22-year-old brother and Jay’s son. Trey also attended Midtown and was a highly involved student who was also extremely smart. He got into a good college and earned a degree in psychology, but because of the economy and his sense of responsibility to Bri and to Jay, Trey returned to Garden Heights to help make ends meet. According to Bri, Trey is doing everything right, but still can’t get out of Garden Heights—something that's extremely disheartening for both of them. He and Bri have always been close. Because he's so much older and has been the only constant in Bri's life, Trey has been a major mentor figure to her. Though he appreciates and understands rap, Trey is far more interested in academics and doesn't believe rapping is a viable career path for his sister. He reprimands her for some of her choices that Jay doesn't know about and takes major offense to Bri’s song—he believes that because of the lyrics, people will think she actually carries a gun and is caught up in gang activity. He also points out that Bri doesn't know a lot about what she raps about. Though Trey is appreciative of Aunt Pooh's help, he's wary and skeptical of Pooh's dealing and gang involvement, and he often cautions Bri to not get too involved with all of it. By the end of the novel, when Bri seems to be on more of a Trey-approved track, Trey takes on the neighborhood kid Jojo, presumably to offer him mentoring and an adult figure in his life to look up to. Trey is set to attend grad school a few months after the novel ends.

Trey Quotes in On the Come Up

The On the Come Up quotes below are all either spoken by Trey or refer to Trey. 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:
Identity and Individuality Theme Icon
).
Chapter 7 Quotes

He graduated with honors. Worked his ass off to get there in the first place, only to have to come back to the hood and work in a pizza shop.

It's bullshit, and it scares me, because if Trey can't make it by doing everything "right," who can?

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey
Page Number: 97
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

I mean...I don't think she is.

For one, eight years is a hell of a long time to be clean. Two, Jay wouldn't go back to all of that. She knows how much it messed us up. She wouldn't put me and Trey through that again.

But.

She put us through it in the first place.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom, Aunt Pooh, Trey, Supreme, Bri’s Grandma, Sister Daniels
Page Number: 125
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

"I don't want you to grow up too fast, baby," Jay says. "I did, and it's not something I can ever get back. I want you to enjoy your childhood as much as possible."

"I'd rather grow up than be homeless."

"Hate that you even have to think like that," she murmurs.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom (speaker), Trey
Related Symbols: Lawless's Chain
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

"Pooh and her drug-dealing money, saving the day."

It is kinda messed up. Here my brother is, doing everything right, and nothing's coming from it. Meanwhile, Aunt Pooh's doing everything we've been told not to do, and she's giving us food when we need it.

That's how it goes though. The drug dealers in my neighborhood aren't struggling. Everybody else is.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom, Aunt Pooh
Page Number: 218
Explanation and Analysis:

"But," he says, in a way that tells me to wipe the smile off my face, "although I get the song, now people are gonna take your words at face value. And let's be real: You're clueless about half the shit you rapped about. Clips on your hips?" Trey twists his mouth. "You know damn well you don't know what a clip is, Bri."

"Yes I do!" It's the thingy that goes on the thingy on a gun.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom, Aunt Pooh
Related Symbols: Bri’s Song, "On the Come Up"
Page Number: 221
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

"The worst thing I've done is become poor, Mrs. Jackson! [...] The worst thing!" she says. "That's it! Excuse me because I have the audacity to be poor!

[...]

You think I want my babies sitting in the dark? I'm trying, Mrs. Jackson! I go on interviews. I withdrew from school so these kids could have food! I begged the church not to let me go. I'm sorry if it's not enough for you, but good Lord, I'm trying!"

Related Characters: Jay / Bri’s Mom (speaker), Bri, Trey, Bri’s Grandma, Bri’s Granddaddy
Page Number: 311
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

"I think about everything we've been through, and if I'd gone through it by myself, I'd probably be where Pooh is right now."

Damn. Aunt Pooh did say she became a GD because she didn't have anyone. Now she's in a jail cell without anyone again. I never realized that Trey could've been like her, with a record instead of a diploma. I know there's so much else that made their lives turn out differently, but he makes it sound like the difference between them was me.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey (speaker), Aunt Pooh
Page Number: 362
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 33 Quotes

"But I believe she's smarter than that," he says. "Don't you?"

"I know she is."

"Can you act like it then?" I ask, and my voice is super soft. "It's not like anybody else does."

This look of surprise quickly appears in my mom's eyes. Slowly, it's replaced by sadness and, soon, realization.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom (speaker), Trey (speaker), Lawless / Bri’s Dad
Page Number: 422
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire On the Come Up LitChart as a printable PDF.
On the Come Up PDF

Trey Quotes in On the Come Up

The On the Come Up quotes below are all either spoken by Trey or refer to Trey. 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:
Identity and Individuality Theme Icon
).
Chapter 7 Quotes

He graduated with honors. Worked his ass off to get there in the first place, only to have to come back to the hood and work in a pizza shop.

It's bullshit, and it scares me, because if Trey can't make it by doing everything "right," who can?

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey
Page Number: 97
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 9 Quotes

I mean...I don't think she is.

For one, eight years is a hell of a long time to be clean. Two, Jay wouldn't go back to all of that. She knows how much it messed us up. She wouldn't put me and Trey through that again.

But.

She put us through it in the first place.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom, Aunt Pooh, Trey, Supreme, Bri’s Grandma, Sister Daniels
Page Number: 125
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 14 Quotes

"I don't want you to grow up too fast, baby," Jay says. "I did, and it's not something I can ever get back. I want you to enjoy your childhood as much as possible."

"I'd rather grow up than be homeless."

"Hate that you even have to think like that," she murmurs.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom (speaker), Trey
Related Symbols: Lawless's Chain
Page Number: 193
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 16 Quotes

"Pooh and her drug-dealing money, saving the day."

It is kinda messed up. Here my brother is, doing everything right, and nothing's coming from it. Meanwhile, Aunt Pooh's doing everything we've been told not to do, and she's giving us food when we need it.

That's how it goes though. The drug dealers in my neighborhood aren't struggling. Everybody else is.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom, Aunt Pooh
Page Number: 218
Explanation and Analysis:

"But," he says, in a way that tells me to wipe the smile off my face, "although I get the song, now people are gonna take your words at face value. And let's be real: You're clueless about half the shit you rapped about. Clips on your hips?" Trey twists his mouth. "You know damn well you don't know what a clip is, Bri."

"Yes I do!" It's the thingy that goes on the thingy on a gun.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom, Aunt Pooh
Related Symbols: Bri’s Song, "On the Come Up"
Page Number: 221
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 23 Quotes

"The worst thing I've done is become poor, Mrs. Jackson! [...] The worst thing!" she says. "That's it! Excuse me because I have the audacity to be poor!

[...]

You think I want my babies sitting in the dark? I'm trying, Mrs. Jackson! I go on interviews. I withdrew from school so these kids could have food! I begged the church not to let me go. I'm sorry if it's not enough for you, but good Lord, I'm trying!"

Related Characters: Jay / Bri’s Mom (speaker), Bri, Trey, Bri’s Grandma, Bri’s Granddaddy
Page Number: 311
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 28 Quotes

"I think about everything we've been through, and if I'd gone through it by myself, I'd probably be where Pooh is right now."

Damn. Aunt Pooh did say she became a GD because she didn't have anyone. Now she's in a jail cell without anyone again. I never realized that Trey could've been like her, with a record instead of a diploma. I know there's so much else that made their lives turn out differently, but he makes it sound like the difference between them was me.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Trey (speaker), Aunt Pooh
Page Number: 362
Explanation and Analysis:
Chapter 33 Quotes

"But I believe she's smarter than that," he says. "Don't you?"

"I know she is."

"Can you act like it then?" I ask, and my voice is super soft. "It's not like anybody else does."

This look of surprise quickly appears in my mom's eyes. Slowly, it's replaced by sadness and, soon, realization.

Related Characters: Bri (speaker), Jay / Bri’s Mom (speaker), Trey (speaker), Lawless / Bri’s Dad
Page Number: 422
Explanation and Analysis: