![]() Ultimately, Troop 6000 puts a different face on homelessness. And they will cheer when the girls sell their very first cookies. Readers will feel an instant connection and express joy when a family finally moves out of the shelter and into a permanent home, as well as the pain of the day-to-day life of homelessness. ![]() ![]() Stewart takes the reader with her as she paints intimate portraits of Giselle’s family and the others whom she met along the way. New York Times journalist Nikita Stewart embedded with Troop 6000 for more than a year, at the peak of New York City’s homelessness crisis in 2017, spending time with the girls and their families and witnessing both their triumphs and challenges. Having worked for the Girl Scouts earlier on, Giselle knew that these girls, including her own daughters, needed something they could be a part of, where they didn’t need to feel the shame or stigma of being homeless, but could instead develop skills and build a community that they could be proud of. ![]() Giselle Burgess, a young mother of five, and her children, along with others in the shelter, become the catalyst for Troop 6000. The extraordinary true story of the first Girl Scout troop designated for homeless girls – from the homeless families it brought together in Queens, New York, to the amazing citywide and countrywide responses it sparked. ![]()
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