From Publishers Weekly
After the 1990 stabbing of a Utah tourist by a NYC gang member, NPR correspondent Hinojosa conducted an "All Things Considered" interview with members of a Queens, N.Y., "crew" (also called posses or gangs). Building on that report, she explores this world through seven interviews with young Queens gang members. They speak candidly, often with disturbing detachment, about a variety of issues: the sense of family offered by crews, how they view their futures, raising their own children, and misconceptions about posses. Members commit petty crimes, but the crews nonetheless seem like social groups compared to the "hard core" gangs of such cities as Los Angeles. Often, however, they come across as caricatures: all talk and no action. Though Hinojosa's own naive views sometimes intrude, her book works best when she gets her subjects to drop their bravado and recount their individual experiences in an increasingly violent society. The resultant portraits powerfully demonstrate how loneliness, hopelessness and low self-esteem affect a growing number of young people. A compelling afterword brings the subjects' lives up to date. Ages 12-up.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From School Library Journal
Grade 9 Up?A provocative and personal look at Latino gang members in New York City. Shank, Coki, Cindy, Tre, Smooth b, and their friends answer the interviewer's questions to reveal lives driven overwhelmingly by some common threads: the need for acceptance, suppressed anger, dysfunctional families, poverty, violence, and drugs. For these teens their "crews" or "posses," the street term for gangs, serve as a safe haven, an anchor to reality, and a place in which to feel in control. Hinojosa's open-ended questioning style encourgages young men and women to tell their own stories. Their reflections on childhood, family, school, loneliness, friendships, the street, drugs, sex, death, fights, and the future are moving testaments to the resiliency of the human spirit. The contemporary topic, universal themes, accessible writing, and compelling language will fill a void on many library's shelves. These powerful statements may serve as a wake-up call to young adults and all who work with them today.?Gail Richmond, San Diego Unified Schools, CA
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.