The Best Crossword Puzzle Maker Online
Powered by BrightSprout
Save Status:
or to save your progress. The page will not refresh.
Controls:
SPACEBAR SWITCHES TYPING DIRECTION
Answer Key:
Edit a Copy:
Make Your Own:
Crossword Word Search Worksheet
Rate This Puzzle:
Log in or sign up to rate this puzzle.

"How To Love A Jamaica" Crossword

Across
Where Alexis Arthurs was born.
In "Bad Behavior", the daughter was sent to Jamaica with her ______ to straighten her out. (page 70-71)
In "Light-Skinned Girls and Kelly Rowland", Cecilia wasn't familiar with her ______.
In "Mash Up Love" the narrator praises ____ because she blessed him with legs. (page 33)
The children that died, died in Old Henry's ___. (page 54-55)
Using one of Vocabulary words, all the mothers in the short stories can be described as ...
"Nobody called it any name or took photos in front of it, and the rocks were sharp but it wasn't anything to keep anyone from swimming".(page 99) The narrator is referring to the "_____ River.
Theses strories can be referred to as ______. (Front Cover)
Down
Alexis Arthurs _____ from Jamaica to Brooklyn when she was 12.
Usually in Jamaican Households, being ____ goes against families wishes.
What was the name of the "Ghost" that haunted Tiffany? (page 123)
A theme taken away from this book is, that there is no such thing as "Perfect _____".
The Author's last name.
_______ finished what his father didn't and became the man of the house.
"Tia was a sensitive, artsy type who had some how stumbled into law school because her middle-class upbringing had _____this path".(page 87)
Most families in the stories, had trouble with getting _____ with America.
Based on the book, what is a traditional dish from a Jamaican Household?
Another thing that played a huge role in the decisions that all of the narrators made.
"In Jamaica, children knew to respect adults, while it wasn't unusual to hear an American child call an adult by her first name. it wasn't that Jamaican children were perfect--it was that when they made__, they knew to be ashamed. (page 71)