Flyy Girl

Flyy Girl is young adult/new adult literature and an urban fiction book written by Omar Tyree. The book was originally published by Mars Productions in 1993 and republished by Simon & Schuster for adults in 1996.[1] The novel is regarded to be the genesis of the modern urban-fiction/street-lit movement that would later gain momentum in 1999 with the publication of Sister Souljah's The Coldest Winter Ever.

Flyy Girl
AuthorOmar Tyree
CountryUnited States
LanguageEnglish
GenreYoung adult literature
Published1993
PublisherMars Productions
Simon & Schuster

Summary

Flyy Girl is African-American coming-of-age story that follows Tracy Ellison from her sixth-birthday party in 1977 to her 17th birthday. Tracy grows up in the middle-class Philadelphia suburb of Germantown. The daughter of a dietitian and pharmacist, Tracy is beautiful, intelligent, and armed with self-esteem and a sassy mouth. Tracy is also boy crazy, which leads to sex in the indulgent, hip-hop 1980s and the effects of the cocaine economy flourishing in black communities.

Sequels

Tyree wrote two sequels to Flyy Girl: For the Love of Money (2001) and Boss Lady (2006). Both were published by Simon & Schuster.

Film adaptation

In July 2013, Lionsgate Entertainment's CodeBlack Films had acquired the rights to Flyy Girl with hopes of transforming the novel into a feature film.[2][3] In February 2015, CodeBlack Films announced that Dear White People producer Effie Brown was hired to produce a film adaptation of the novel. Brown and her company, Duly Noted Inc., will oversee the film's development alongside Codeblack Films' Jeff Clanagan and Quincy Newell.[4]

On June 17, 2015, it was announced that Sanaa Lathan would star in and executive produce the film adaptation of Omar Tyree's trilogy that starts with Flyy Girl. Lathan will portray Tracy Ellison, a successful businesswoman and workaholic who believes that money is always the key to happiness. Geoffrey S. Fletcher was hired to write the script.[5]

gollark: And how well everyone else did, and stuff like the total marks on the exam.
gollark: In that case % is betttererrer.
gollark: Grades let you distance, well, grades, from actual % results on stuff.
gollark: Of course, *that* means that how good you're considered depends on how well everyone else does. Although that probably would have been the case to some extent anyway.
gollark: I mean, "you got X % of the questions right" might not line up exactly with what your grade should be, and the difficulty of exams might vary from exam to exam.

References

  1. "Flyy Girl". librarything.com. Retrieved July 18, 2013.
  2. "Lionsgate's CodeBlack Films Acquires Rights To Omar Tyree's 'Flyy Girl' Trilogy". deadline.com. July 17, 2013. Retrieved 18 July 2013.
  3. "Codeblack Films acquires rights to 'Flyy Girl' trilogy". chicagotribune.com. July 17, 2013. Retrieved July 18, 2013.
  4. "Effie Brown To Produce Film Adaptation Of Author Omar Tyree's Flyy Girl | blackfilm.com/read". Blackfilm.com. March 12, 2015. Retrieved June 20, 2015.
  5. Dave McNary. "Sanaa Lathan Starring in 'Flyy Girl' Movie". Variety. Retrieved June 20, 2015.


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