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(Paperback - Reissue)
This is the moving and powerful account of two remarkable boys struggling to survive in Chicago's Henry Horner Homes, a public housing complex disfigured by crime and neglect.
In his acclaimed 1987 series for The Wall Street Journal, Alex Kotlowitz established that the tender underside of our embattled inner cities is the children, urban America's greatest casualty and its only hope. With this searing and important work, he continues the stories of 12-year-old Lafayette Rivers and his younger brother Pharoah as they confront tragedy on a daily basis.
The devastating story of brothers Lafayette and Pharoah Rivers, children of the Chicago ghetto, is powerfully told here by Kotlowitz, a Wall Street Journal reporter who first met the boys in 1985 when they were 10 and seven, respectively. Their family includes a mother, a frequently absent father, an older brother and younger triplets. We witness the horrors of growing up in an ill-maintained housing project tyrannized by drug gangs and where murders and shootings frequently occur. Lafayette tries to cope by stifling his emotions and turning himself into an automaton, while Pharoah first attempts to regress into early childhood and then finds a way out by excelling at school. Kotlowitz's affecting report does not have a ``neat and tidy ending. . . . It is, instead, about a beginning, the dawning of two lives.'' These are lives at a crossroads, not totally without hope of triumphing over their origin. ( Apr .
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February 27, 2008: I choose There Are No Children Here because it was a nonfiction biography,and because of its high reviews. It was a very enjoyable book.The book really opened my eyes more into the lives of children growing up in poverty as well as in the ghetto. I also learned alot about Chihcago that I never knew.
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May 19, 2006: THERE ARE NO CHILDREN HERE This book is about two kids and their family growing up in the Henry Horner Projects. The boys? names are Pharaoh and Lafayette. The boys? mother is named Lajoe. Lajoe, as any caring mother would, tried to keep her kids out of trouble and in school, but they faced the fact that were they lived was not safe at all. They suffered from poverty, Lajoe had very little money. Pharaoh and Lafayette want to go to college. Their dream is to leave the projects and move into a nicer safer place. Most of the people in the complex would never open their windows because they feared that bullets might come flying in. Most of the gang members consist of boys as young as thirteen. Kids that age were already shooting, fighting, doing drugs, gangbanging and drinking. It was difficult living in the projects because nothing ever changed. Paul, the kids? father never helped them. He didn?t even have a job, he only made things worse. He sold his kid?s T.V for drugs. I think that the title, There Are No Children Here means that there are no children there in the projects because of the many things they see that there are not suppose to. That?s why most of them grow up as bad adults because of the killing, drugs, shooting, and fighting that they saw as kids. Many people don?t survive because of the dangers in the projects. There is more to it, but you have to read to find out. I hope you read There Are No Children Here to find out more about the other America. I would recommend this book to someone because it?s a different life style from what other people live.