From School Library Journal
Grade 6–8—Set in a tough, crime-ridden housing project in Glasgow, this novel opens with 12-year-old Jake Drake getting kicked in the groin and mugged twice in 10 minutes, losing the money meant to buy his Gran's food. Jake and his friends decide they have had enough and will fight back against the local crime bosses by creating a fake gangster, the Big Baresi. By spreading rumors of this biggest, baddest thug ever, the con works, but soon things spiral out of control. A lot is going on in this novel: Jake and his buddies steal an 18-wheeler full of sumo suits and get in a gunfire battle with corrupt police; an ex-convict looking for $3 million in diamonds returns to the project; the boys steal $20,000 that then is stolen from them; and, finally, they steal an ice-cream van. All works out in the end, with Jake being instrumental in getting the community center rebuilt so that residents young and old have a place to gather. The end is set up for the reappearance of the Big Baresi in a sequel. The theme of kids taking control and showing adults how to make things better is a good one, although the means the characters employ to do so are questionable at best. While humorous in tone, there is much that is crude and objectionable here. Preadolescent boys will no doubt giggle over Jake's flatulent Gran, whose "butt trumpeting" is renowned. But fighting, belching, and farting on nearly every page gets a bit old.—
Connie Tyrrell Burns, Mahoney Middle School, South Portland, ME Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.
Scottish writer Docherty takes kids living in an urban housing project and imbues them with the power of a crime lord in this rollicking, laugh-out-loud thriller. The novel starts with a kick to the groin in a stairwell and ends with a gutsy ice-cream-truck chase through Glasgow. Holding everything together is hero Jake Drake, 13, who, refusing to be bullied out of his money, seeks protection from local crime lord Cortesi, only to discover that Cortesi is behind the stairwell muggings during which Jake lost his money in the first place. Jake and his friends then invent an imaginary protector, the Big Baresi, and use a rumor-and-flier campaign to convince everyone that Baresi is for real. When a load of diamonds goes missing, however, Cortesi comes after Baresi—and Jake and his chums are in big trouble. Punny, wry, age-appropriately gross, and great fun. Grades 6-10. --Connie Fletcher
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.