Harlem. The late 1940s. Fifteen-year-old Johnny Gibbs loves his parents,
respects his teachers, and is a model student. Suddenly, his familiar
world falls apart. Johnny learns he is really a foster child who the
welfare authorities have decreed now must go and live with another
family. Stunned by the revelation, Johnny runs away. The startling
events that follow, during Johnny's nightlong confrontation with
alienation and loneliness, will inexorably push him past the frontiers
of childhood and into an unknown, violent world beyond. Rite of Passage,
Richard Wright's never-before-published story of Johnny Gibbs's fall
from grace, is as pertinent to the fate of many young people today as it
was when it was first conceived nearly fifty years ago.