In the first part we are introduced to Frankie, her mother figure Bernice, and cousin John Henry, thought their conversations in the kitchen. The story is told solely around Frankie’s point of view. Frankie’s character feels like an outcast and misfit. She longs to be apart of something bigger and wants to find her “we”. Frankie was kicked out her friend group because of a shoplifting incident, and is not satisfied with her relations with John Henry, and Bernice. In addition to her struggle in trying to find “better” company, she struggles with her identity. Frankie does not like who she is. She complains that she is getting too tall, and has bad cropped …show more content…
It is the morning before her brothers wedding, and she is trying to get dressed. She decides to wear her pink dress and stockings, instead of her normal tomboyish clothes. She changes her name to F. Jasmine, and heads to town to see everything before she leaves with her brother and his fiancé (whose names also start with “Ja”). As Frankie is downtown, she runs into a soldier, who invites her into a local bar, and buys her a drink. He asks her to go on a date later that night, and she agrees. She then stops by a place to get a nice dress for the