Dark Dude by Oscar Hijuelos

BUY IT NEW

  • $16.99 List price
    $16.14 Online Price
    $14.52 Member price
    (Save 14%)
    Limited Time Offer! Everyone receives the Member Price on books.
    See Details
  • skip to cart
  • Add To List uiAction=GetAllLists&page=List&pageType=list&ean=9781416948049&productCode=BK&maxCount=100&threshold=3

GET FREE SHIPPING ON ORDERS OF $25 OR MORE

DELIVERY & GIFT DETAILS:

Usually ships within 24 hours

These items ship to U.S. addresses only.
Delivery Time and Shipping Rates

Eligible for gift wrap & gift message.

BUY IT USED

34 copies from $1.99

See All Available

Pick Me Up

Reserve it at BN.com & pick it up in 60 minutes at your local store.

Enter a zip code

(Hardcover)

  • Pub. Date: September 2008
  • 448pp
  • Sales Rank: 241,376

Reader Rating: (4 ratings)

Detailed Rating: "Edgy" See All

FOR PARENTS

Buy it Used: 34 copies from $1.99 See All Available

Customers who bought this also bought

 
  • Overview
  • Editorial Reviews
  • Customer Reviews
  • Meet the Writer
  • Features

Product Details

  • Pub. Date: September 2008
  • Publisher: Simon & Schuster Children's Publishing
  • Format: Hardcover, 448pp
  • Sales Rank: 241,376
  • Age Range: Young Adult
  • Lexile: 980L 

Synopsis

Rico Fuentes tiene 15 años, vive en Harlem y es norteamericano de primera generacion. Estamos a los finales de los 60 a principios de los 70 del pasado siglo. Su padre y su madre son cubanos, de procedencia muy modesta y oscuros de tez, su hermana pequeña es tambien mulata. Su padre tiene problems con el alcohol.

Publishers Weekly

Hijuelos, the Pulitzer Prize-winning author of The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love, has said that his first YA novel is a novel he wished he'd read as a teen. His themes are classic-alienation, the search for identity-but his approach is pure Hijuelos: Cuban-American, musical and very, very funny.

Rico Fuentes, his 15-year-old narrator, is a "dark dude" in late-'60s Harlem, a Cuban-American so light-skinned that, he says, he carries " 'get-jumped,' money 'cause I attracted both Latino and black takeoff artists who saw my white skin as a kind of flashing neon sign that said 'Rob me.' " His best buddy Jimmy, who illustrates Rico's "homegrown" comic-book stories about superheroes like "El Gato" and "the Latin Dagger," is becoming a junkie. Rico's mother pretends not to understand his English, blaming him for the childhood illness that put the family in debt. Kids get shot at school ("an incident involving gunplay," as the principal describes it) and his dad wants to send him to his uncle's military school in Florida.

Rico, an outsider par excellence, is good at finding paths still further out. He's got Huckleberry Finn from literature as one type of guide and Gilberto from the neighborhood as another. Gilberto, "the big brother I never had," has won the lottery and used it toward tuition at Milton College in rural Wisconsin. Grabbing Jimmy, Rico lights out for Gilberto's place, in search of his freedom, like Huck and Jim. Hijuelos gives Rico months on a communal farm with hippies, a small-town girlfriend with a cop brother, and encounters with racists before his a-ha! moment ("Where you are doesn't change who you are"). Like Dorothy returning from Oz(an adventure also referenced here), the inevitability of the conclusion doesn't matter: it's the smooth, jazzy flow of the narration, the slides between Rico's rootlessness and the book's strong sense of place that count. Ages 12-up. (Sept.)

Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

More Reviews and Recommendations

Biography

With its lush writing and Proustian sensuousness, Oscar Hijuelos’s Pulitzer Prize-winning novel, The Mambo Kings Play Songs of Love, established him as a great literary stylist. In subsequent books, Hijuelos, who enjoys experimenting with form and voice, has continued to explore memory, assimilation, and identity in the rich language that has become his trademark.

More About the Author

Customer Reviews

  • Reader Rating:
  • Ratings: 4Reviews: 2

Catcher in the Rye's Kid Brotherby oraymw

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

June 11, 2009: I cannot think of any situation where I would rather read this than The Catcher in the Rye.

Essentially, this book is a cheap knock-off of Catcher in the Rye. The voice is nearly identical, except that Oscar Hijuelos swears a lot more (by a lot I mean about every page). The main character, Rico, is Holden Caulfield with Cuban parents. The story is very similar, kid runs away to find himself. The setting is similar until Rico runs off to live on a farm. The main point is that this is a cheaper, more shallow version of Catcher in the Rye.

There is no plot, so if you really like a strong plot, then this isn't you. If you like beautiful prose, this isn't for you. If you like deep characters that have some sort of realization, this book isn't for you. If you like to read about people swearing, drinking, and smoking pot, then this book is for you.

I Also Recommend: The Road, The Catcher in the Rye, The Giver, Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy, The House of the Scorpion.

Reviewed by Cana Rensberger for TeensReadToo.comby TeensReadToo

Reader Rating:
See Detailed Ratings

October 27, 2008: How many teens have wished they could escape the darkness of their lives and live in a land of milk and honey? Rico Fuentes does just that in DARK DUDE by Oscar Hijuelos.

Rico is one-hundred-percent Cuban, yet he struggles daily to identify with his Cuban peers. His mom and little sister have brunette hair and cinnamon colored skin. His dad has both dark wavy hair and dark eyes. But Rico, with hazel eyes and fair skin with freckles, looks white. In Harlem, that pretty much guarantees daily harassment.

When Rico has to change to a public school, he is exposed to drugs, crime, and violence like never before. Early in the school year, a student is shot and Rico watches in shock as his new classmates celebrate a day off. Soon Rico's skipping school to avoid random beatings. When his pops finds out, he warns Rico that he'll be spending the summer with his military uncle in Florida.

It's not until his friend Jimmy is rushed to the hospital due to a drug-related accident that Rico realizes he has only one way out. He must find a way to Wisconsin to stay with his friend, Gilberto, on his farm. When Jimmy is released, Rico talks him into going to Wisconsin with him. After a road trip to remember on the way to the farm, they wonder what they've gotten themselves into when Gilberto immediately puts them to work painting the outside of the dilapidated farmhouse in exchange for their room and board.

Rico finds farm life in Wisconsin to be much slower than in Harlem. He spends a lot of time re-reading his favorite author, Mark Twain. Then he finds himself attracted to a girl whose father has a drinking problem. He'd never realized that his own experiences with an alcoholic dad could be helpful to someone else. As the months go by, Rico begins to look at himself, and those around him, differently. More importantly, he begins to accept himself.

DARK DUDE is a gritty read. The projects, the bars, and the backstreets of Harlem become real to the reader as Mr. Hijuelos drops you into each scene, and he creates a character with so much promise, but with so much working against him, that we cannot stop at each chapter break. Instead we read on, praying that nothing bad will happen to Rico, and when it does, we find ourselves urging Rico on, to find the best in himself, to reach for those dreams we know he wants. This is a realistic yet inspiring read for anyone who wants to find a way to make a different choice, to find the person they really want to be.

common sense media

This item Rated Appropriate for Ages 15 and Up

Why We Rated This Appropriate for Ages 15 and UP

What to watch out for

  • Drugs:

    Major and minor characters, both adults and children, drink, often get drunk, smoke tobacco and marijuana, and in a detailed scene, one prepares and injects heroin. Major characters grow and sell marijuana. Drunken, angry parents mistreat a... More

    Major and minor characters, both adults and children, drink, often get drunk, smoke tobacco and marijuana, and in a detailed scene, one prepares and injects heroin. Major characters grow and sell marijuana. Drunken, angry parents mistreat and abuse children, a son has to get his falling-down-drunk father home from a bar and up four flights of stairs. References to hashish, LSD, and junkies. Close

  • Language:

    "S--t," (and the Spanish word for it) "t-tty," the N word, "p---y," "spic," "f----t,""dick," "ass," "MF" and "motherf--king" (with the dashes) both used.

    Close

  • Sex:

    References to falsies, Playboy, masturbation, condoms, making out, sodomy. A man pulls out his penis and tries to get two teen boys to masturbate him. It's implied that the teen main character has sex.

    Close

  • Violence:

    A boy is shot, others are badly beaten, including having teeth knocked out. A father punches his son repeatedly. A junkie accidentally sets himself on fire while high on heroin.

    Close

  • Consumerism:

    Candy, sneaker, snack, cigarette and tobacco, ice cream, soft drink, fast food, gum brands.

    Close

What Parents Need to Know

About Dark Dude

Parents need to know that there is a lot of adult content here: language, sexual references, violence, and drug use (including one very detailed scene of preparation and injection of heroin). See the advisories for details. Marijuana use, drunkenness, stealing, and hitchhiking are all treated as normal parts of life, mostly without consequences.

Families Can Talk About

Families can talk about Rico's dilemma: a white-looking boy in a black and Hispanic ghetto, with a drunken father and a mother who blames him for her life. What would you do? Was his running away a good option? Did he have others? Should he have stayed in Wisconsin? What do you think will happen to him when he gets back?