After lunch, Scoob and G'ma visit a state park, where G'ma shows Scoob the box where she keeps important belongings. As he talks, Scoob notices he is attracting disdainful stares from the other diners, and he assumes this is because he is a black boy eating with his white grandmother. At the restaurant, Scoob tells G'ma about a fight he got into at school because a bully was picking on his friend Shenice's brother. They begin their trip by crossing the Georgia border into Alabama where they stop for lunch. Scoob has recently gotten in trouble at school and been grounded by his father, James, so he is particularly anxious to get away. She tells him she has just sold her house to buy the vehicle and she invites him on a road trip. The novel opens with the 11-year-old protagonist William “Scoob” Lamar being picked up by his grandmother, whom he calls “G'ma,” in an RV. New York: Crown Books for Young Readers, 2020. The following version of this book was used to create this study guide: Stone, Nic.
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