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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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March 19, 2009: Its a shame how many kids are at a disadvantage from birth. I have much respect for Mr. Kotlowitz for trying to be part of the solution and not adding on to the problems.
I Also Recommend: The Shame of the Nation.
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December 01, 2008: I choose to read There Are No Children Here because it was a very interesting book dealing with the poverty life of a family trying to survive the daily hardships in a rough area of Chicago. When reading this book I thought it was very interesting on how the two brother?s pharaoh and Lafayette had two options when growing up. You could either go to school, and not give in to the local gang or you could be persuaded by the younger recruits to work for the drug lords. When reading this book you get captured to the ways the two brothers live and how they stick together throughout the story. As the older brother Lafayette looks out for his younger brother telling him right from wrong I felt disappointed when he starts to get into trouble by hanging out with the wrong crowd. When reading about the mother in this story whose name is Lajoe it shows how hard she really has it, caring for all of the people in her family and wanting her children to grow up to complete there education and leave there horrible neighborhood. There is a lot of violence in this book dealing with the gangbanging and daily shootings that occur making everyone scared to go outside and even go for a walk .If you like to read books that excite you, and want you to read more this book would be for you. I would recommend this book to anyone that likes adventure and excitement dealing with all of the problems that go on.