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84 of 90 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
AN ASTONISHING WORK,
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Hardcover)
All of us have read many family stories but surely none as compelling or heartbreaking as this.Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, who has written for the New York Times Magazine, Esquire, The Village Voice, and others, gained unprecedented access to those living in an impoverished section of the Bronx. For some ten years the author shared their existence as she documented struggles, defeats, and transient victories. "Random Family" is an astonishing work of straightforward reportage; it is also written with heart. A stunning picture of life in the Bronx drug trade, "Random Family" is traced through the experiences of two girls, Jessica and Coco. In Part I, "The Street" we are introduced to Jessica who lived on Tremont Avenue, "...one of the poorer blocks in a very poor section of the Bronx. She dressed even to go to the store. Chance was opportunity in the ghetto and you had to be prepared for anything....A sixteen-year-old Puerto Rican girl with bright hazel eyes, a generous mouth, and a voluptuous shape, she radiated intimacy wherever she went. You could be talking to her in the bustle of Tremont and feel as though lovers' confidences were being exchanged beneath a tent of sheets. Guys in cars offered rides. Women pursed their lips, grown men got stupid, boys made promises they could not keep." Jessica's man of choice is Boy George, a young heroin dealer with money to spare and a willingness to do anything to earn more. He provides undreamed of escapes: trips, jewelry buying sprees, and a car that James Bond would envy. He's also free with physical abuse. Coco, a fourteen-year-old, is the other girl. "Boys called her Shorty because she was short, and Lollipop because she tucked lollipops in the topknot of her ponytail; her teacher called her Motor Mouth because she talked a lot." But, school wasn't high on Coco's list of priorities. She has eyes for Cesar, Jessica's younger brother, who is working hard at becoming a thug. This pair also enjoys the big time for a while, if you can relish luxury while your friends are being murdered. Teenage pregnancies are the norm, and being old at 30 isn't a surprise. Prison becomes home. "Random Family" is a look at a part of our country we would like to think does not exist. But, it does and the awareness of it sears. We owe a debt of gratitude to Adrian Nicole LeBlanc for her honesty and dogged courage. - Gail Cooke
40 of 45 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
Profound,
By A Customer
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Hardcover)
This has to be one of the best books that I have ever read. LeBlanc grasped "it", the life, the city, the love or lack there of, the lifestyle, the losses and the helplessness. I read this book like I would have an article in Rolling Stone, holding on to every word, wanting to know what happened next. I could not put it down. It was a personal experience for me, having lived a portion of my life like the girls in Random Family. I must say that one of my frustrations has been that there are not enough of these kind of stories out there for us to read. This is the reality of our world, our social structure. Welfare is not a luxury, housing systems are not free living, not all criminals should remain prisioners. These are everyday people caught up in a cycle, a family cyle, generation to generation. These are our neighbors, the woman at the supermarket, the girl at the doctors office, just random people. And this book is just about that, a random family. There are so many families like this, torn apart, looking for the love that so often is mistaken for money, sex or a drug. I would recommend this book to anyone who asked. I believe that Ms. LeBlanc will be one of the greatest journalists of all time. I am so impressed with her writing and her willingness to study her subjects, living in less that acceptable accomodations, dedicating herself and her life to the research, becoming apart of their families. I consider this book one of the best, I hope that you will too.
115 of 141 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Very mixed emotions,
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Paperback)
I grew up in one of the neighborhoods portrayed in this book, and while I believe the author has accurately described Jessica, Coco and their friends and relatives, these people are not representative of everyone who lives in the South Bronx. There are many, many people in these neighborhoods who shun the drug-dealing and thug lifestyle. These people work hard at low paying jobs (think doormen, porters, mailroom clerks, cashiers) and scrimp and save to send their children to Catholic school. They don't hang out on street corners and they don't allow their children to do so either. And they are the victims of people like Boy George and Cesar, they are the ones whose apartments are robbed, whose children are beaten on the way home from school, whose daughters are harassed.
I hate the idea that middle-class white liberals are reading this book and getting some kind of voyeuristic thrill. I suspect they wouldn't be nearly as enthralled by a book that chronicled the lives of the people I've described above, the ones who try to live upstanding lives despite overwhelming poverty and the threats of the street.
36 of 42 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars
Both random and familiar: applying faces to actions,
By A Customer
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Hardcover)
My interest in Adrian Nicole LeBlanc's new book was sparked by the excerpt from it that I read in the New York Times Magazine a few weeks ago. Her simple writing style and unsentimental look at the hard lives that "Lolli" and "Toney" have led since the mid-1980s appealed to me, and I decided that I had to buy Random Family when it came out. Having bought it today, I can testify that this book is no disappointment. Poignant and emotional, it succeeds in offering a glimpse into the lives of individuals growing up in a poverty stricken and dangerous Bronx while still emphasizing the importance of family life and the dependance on community that is so prevelent there. LeBlanc also paints a striking picture of family life in the ghetto and how it is affected by crime and the consequences that accompany it. If you are interested in learning more about the struggles and sacrifices of families whose stories are not often heard, this book is for you. I highly recommend it.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
An excellent book,
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Paperback)
This is an outstanding book that required some patience to finish, but ultimately certainly paid off. It tells the stories of a group of Hispanic individuals whose lives, spent between the Bronx and other dangerous neighborhoods are related by family, love, crime or misfortune. I think the book can be roughly divided in two parts.
The first part is the one I found harder to read, didn't stir much sympathy in me, and mostly succeeded in making me really angry and contemptuous towards most of the characters. Here you see them at their worst. Young, ruthless, unable to control any of their cravings for money, sex, or anything else that money can buy. Teenage sex is the rule, contraceptives aren't even mentioned, drugs are bought and sold as if they were (expensive and profitable) vegetables, women are repeatedly beaten up by bad boyfriends they don't want to leave. Then many central characters end up in jail, and the second part of the book starts. Here is when you start realizing how young these characters were when they ended up making the wrong choices that they will never be able to fix later in life. And here is where my symphathy gradually replaced my contempt. The second part of the book should be compulsory reading for every narrow-minded individual who thinks that everyone simply has what he/she deserves, and that these people should be just left to rot with their own problems. Here is where you start realizing that in an environment where most girls are molested before they reach puberty, where violence and drugs are the rule, and contraception is not even considered, kids end up doing a LOT of stupid mistakes before they are 15 years old, and when they will realize they should have behaved differently, that's already too late: boys are in jail, girls have 4 children, from 3 or 4 different fathers. The stories of Coco (and her girls) and Cesar, are particularly touching. I couldn't help feeling for Coco, who finally starts maturing after too many early pregnancies, when things are already out of control. And for Cesar, who needed years of jail to become a better man. This is, by the way, another aspect of this story that I found interesting and in some way, hopeful. Jails, in this book, are certainly terrible places, but here and there you also find peaks of humanity, both among the inmates, and among some of guards. Finally, the book is really very well written, in a dry, fairly neutral, but very effective style. The author succeeds in letting the reader decide how to react to each event, without imposing her point of view. Well done, and thank!
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
All-consuming read that leaves the reader to make up their own mind,
By
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Paperback)
This is an amazing and all-consuming story. LeBlanc transports the reader into an extended family in the Bronx. She recounts the relationships, the fights, the betrayals, the drugs, the crime, the unintentional preganancies, the jail time, and much more for her intertwined cast of characters. Everything is presented as is--the only reflection on the characters' motivation is their own. LeBlanc does not try to extrapolate from their experiences or impart her own beliefs on the reader. The reader is left to draw his or her own conclusions from the interactions they read about.
It's easy enough to say women in the ghetto need to start using contraceptions and get off their butts and get jobs. I learned through the people in this book that life is much more complicated than that. Children aren't afforded learning opportunities because their parents are using drugs and having unsavory characters around. No one wakes the teenaged girls up to tell them about pregnancy. The girls have no sense of self worth and want to have children to force the fathers of their kids to love them. Every woman in here was once sexually abused, so responsible mothers can't their there children with friends or family members who have random people traipsing through the house, and that prevents them from getting jobs and getting out of the house. This book comes full-circle with the story of one Bronx family. It opens with Jessica, pregnant at age 16. It ends 16 years later with Jessica's daughter Serena ready to get in as much trouble as her mother did at that age, despite the major strides Jessica has made at becoming a functioning member of society. LeBlanc's dedication to her task--combing through trial records, wiretaps, police reports, child welfare reports, and conducting years of interviews--has really paid off in this compelling narrative.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Gripping, Heartfelt, Wonderful Book!,
By N. Tettey (New York, New York) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Paperback)
I just finished reading Random Family, and I have to say it has left a lasting impression on me. This book grabs the reader from page one and doesn't let go. While reading this book I found myself caring about the characters and hoping that they would stop making the devastating choices that kept them in the cycle of poverty. However, as I kept reading I came to understand that it was not entirely the characters fault that they were in the predicaments that they were in. Being born into poverty gave them little options for a better life. They pretty much emulated what they saw. Random family gives first hand insight into the plight of America's inner city. Without proper community resources, well paying jobs, adequate education, and good, affordable housing these problems will only get worse. I applaud the author for being so ambitious and bringing us a story that everyone needs to hear.
8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
A Powerful Picture of Reality,
By A Customer
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Hardcover)
This non-judgemental, captivating story of life in the Bronx is all the more powerful because it is real. For anyone interested in subcultures within the American experience this is a thoroughly engrossing book. For anyone who has ever questioned the judgement, or life-chioces of those entrenched in poverty this book provides the framework for understanding the cycles of love and abuse that perpetuate themselves. For anyone who has ever been sad to finish a wonderful novel because they were going to "miss the characters" this book provides a new dimension of captivation. It is tragic, touching, enlightening and stunningly well-written. It is a truly fascinating book.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars
couldn't believe it,
By Anastasia Orange "fire monster" (Washington) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Paperback)
I was so enthralled with this book that I read it in 3 days while working 16 hour shifts at work. I kept having to check to make sure that ms. LeBlanc wasn't actually making the story up or a member of the families she was writing about. The story was effortless, beautiful, dramatic and heartbreaking. I found myself living a diferent life than I had ever imagined or thought existed through reading this book. If you want to expose yourself to a part of this country that is as distinct in culture as anywhere else in the world, please read this book. You will find yorself speechless as you close it when you finish it.
11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars
Important topic, but disappointing nonetheless,
By A Customer
This review is from: Random Family: Love, Drugs, Trouble, and Coming of Age in the Bronx (Hardcover)
I, like many other readers, was anxious to get my hands on this book due to the many glowing reviews in the press. Yet, while LeBlanc takes on an important topic, her handling of it is disappointing. Her reporting on her subjects' lives seem to begin and end at random points--we pick up with their lives in midstream and then things just drop off at the end. Sure, life is like this, but the book could have had a more skillful structure.Also, it would have been interesting to know how LeBlanc met these subjects, why she chose to shadow them and not others, and what the dynamics of her relationship with these people were. I can understand her attempt to maintain some sort of distance in the writing, but, given that she followed these people for 10 years, she must have become fairly close with them--why hide that in the writing? And, while others have raved about LeBlanc's writing style, I found it flat--just a chronological litany of day-to-day activities with little context. While I wanted to feel compassionate towards LeBlanc's subjects, as I slogged on through the book, I felt increasingly frustrated and at times even angry. While it's true that many of these subjects are born into extremely tough situations--far tougher than many of us can imagine--they continually make poor choices and dig themselves into even deeper holes. I wish LeBlanc had delved into the notion of personal responsibility more, or at least contrasted her subjects' lives with other subjects from the Bronx who did NOT drop out of high school or have child after child with different men. Surely, there are others out there who have fought the same odds but made different choices along the way--I would like to read about those people, too. |
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Random Family by Adrian Nicole LeBlanc (Paperback - 2003)
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