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Drive By
 
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Drive By [Paperback]

Gary Rivlin (Author)


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Book Description

The story of a group of teenagers whose dispute over a bicycle ended in murder presents the experiences of their families, investigators, and defenders, in an examination of the human element of random violence. 15,000 first printing. $15,000 ad/promo.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

On July 9, 1990, three teenagers killed a 13-year-old boy and wounded two others in a drive-by shooting in Oakland, California. The shooter, Tony (Fat 'Tone) Davis, was accompanied by John (Junebug) Jones III and Aaron Estill. The shooting was the aftermath of an incident the day before, when a bicycle Junebug had borrowed was stolen and he was set upon by a gang of younger boys, one carrying a length of pipe; the shooting victim, however, had not been in that gang. Here Rivlin (Fire on the Prairie) presents a full picture of the families of the three killers, all now in prison for various terms, and the Oakland ghetto during the 1980s and early '90s. All three teens came from broken families, were involved in drug trafficking and hoped for better lives. But the economy of the city was a shambles, their schools were inadequate and, in the absence of parental guidance, the force of peer pressure was insurmountable. Unlike many youthful murderers, the three were remorseful. Rivlin gives human faces to juvenile offenders who are often portrayed as stereotypes.
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

From Library Journal

Rivlin, a reporter for an Oakland, California, newspaper and author of Fire on the Prairie (LJ 3/15/92), delves behind a drive-by killing of one teen by three others during the summer of 1990. Using the murder as an example, Rivlin intends to throw light on America's epidemic of youth violence. In spite of his great investigative reporting and a sympathetic portrayal of the murderers' lives, the murder is still inexplicable. The killers did not know the murdered 13-year-old or the others they wounded; they did not at first realize anyone was shot. Instead, the three boys had a case of hurt pride against another kid about a bicycle, but they never intended to murder him. How did it all happen? Rivlin piles up incriminating factors. All the principals lived in East Oakland's "killing zone," where police term murders during drug deals "victimless crimes." The public schools had failed the boys. Their families, beset with overwhelming burdens, could not prevent their boys from becoming drug dealers. Rivlin suggests that this combination, along with a setting where poor housing, violence, drugs, liquor, guns, and a lack of escape routes is endemic, makes a drive-by killing or some other tragedy inevitable. For general social science and criminology collections.?Janice Dunham, John Jay Coll. Lib., New York
Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 288 pages
  • Publisher: Interlink Publishing+group Inc (May 1, 1996)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0704380129
  • ISBN-13: 978-0704380127
  • Product Dimensions: 8.2 x 5.2 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.4 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,492,622 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

I'll confess that in high school I was the type more likely to read the Cliff Notes than the assigned work. I was going to be an engineer; who cared about books? But for a requirement in college I took a literature course and I've been grateful ever since. I joke that I'm a self-taught reader, having pretty much started at age 19.

Politics and social issues propelled me into journalism. I felt like I had something to say so I started to write. In college I always enjoyed reading a great alternative weekly, the Chicago Reader. I began contributing to the Reader and eventually earned a staff job there writing about Chicago politics. That led to my first book, Fire on the Prairie, in which I tell the story of race politics at work in every big city by telling the tale of Chicago during the 1980s, a particularly brutal racial time in that city's history.

Youth violence was the subject of my second book, Drive-By. In that work, I introduce readers to the range of characters and issues at work in a single drive-by shooting that left a 13-year-old dead and put three teenagers in prison for murder. With my third book, The Plot to Get Bill Gates, I returned to my early tech roots.

I left the book world for about a decade. I started writing for a range of magazines, from Wired to the New York Times Magazine to GQ. At the start of 2004, I took a staff position with The New York Times. As terrific experience as that was, I'm very happy to be returning to books and talking about my latest work, BROKE, USA: From Pawnshops to Poverty, Inc. - How the Working Poor Became Big Business.

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