After witnessing his 10-year-old brother get killed in a crossfire between rival gang members on Philadelphia's north side in August of 1994, Junior and his family relocate to Brooke's Rowe on the south side of town. He tries to cope by making new friends but is rejected by his peers. They mock and humiliate Junior, 14, at school and around his neighborhood. He finds solace in poetry but feels overwhelmed by the complexities of his impoverished community. Meanwhile, the police force is conveniently inept at solving the skyrocketing homicides in Junior's part of town. His rage spirals out of control at school one day when a bully pushes him over the edge. He retaliates, gets expelled and is forced to enroll into Medgar Evers Secondary School; one of the toughest institutions in all of South Philly. Junior befriends an enigmatic staff member, Casey, who takes an interest in the boy's poetic gifts.
Junior's story is a fight for survival and the pursuit of happiness. Beyond Poetry is an immersive combination of storytelling, poetry and African-American literature told in retrospective detail. Jarelle's novel reads like a motion picture with 1990s vibes on every page.