"You scribblin' again, Joey?" Nana Rose would ask, her voice like sandpaper on velvet. "Just keepin' track, Nana," he’d say.
He wasn't writing stories about dragons or spaceships. Joe wrote about the "Ghetto Bird"—the police helicopter that circled at 2:00 AM—and how its spotlight turned the cracked pavement into a stage for a few seconds. He wrote about Mr. Henderson, who ran the bodega and could tell a person’s whole week just by whether they bought milk or a pack of Newports. Joe - Ghetto Child
Years later, when Joe stood on a stage in a suit that cost more than his old apartment, he didn’t talk about the glitz. He opened a tattered spiral notebook and told the world about a boy on a fire escape who learned that if you look hard enough, even the hardest streets can be a masterpiece. "You scribblin' again, Joey
That night, Joe didn’t write about the sirens. He wrote about the "Halo." He realized that being a "ghetto child" wasn't just about what they didn't have; it was about the intensity of what they did have—the loyalty, the survival, and the neon-lit beauty hidden in the grit. Joe wrote about the "Ghetto Bird"—the police helicopter
A shadow fell over his page. It was Malik, a nineteen-year-old with a reputation for being the fastest runner—and the toughest talker—on the block.
Joe didn't flinch. He handed the notebook over. Malik’s eyes scanned the page. Joe had written a poem about the basketball court—how the orange rim was a "rust-covered halo" and the players were "kings in nylon jerseys, fighting for a kingdom that ended at the sidewalk."
In the rhythmic pulse of the North Philly projects, ten-year-old Joe was known as the "Ghost with the Note." While other kids were chasing ice cream trucks or dodging the watchful eyes of the corner crews, Joe was usually tucked into a fire escape, clutching a tattered spiral notebook as if it held the blueprints to a getaway car.