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- Hardcover:
304 pages ; Dimensions (in inches): 1.25 x 9.46 x
6.58
- Publisher:
Scribner; ; (February 2003)
- ISBN:
0684863871
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AN
ASTONISHING WORK,
January 30, 2003
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Reviewer:
G. Cooke from TX |
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
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