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Sto caricando le informazioni... Giorni di fuocodi Ryan Gattis
Top Five Books of 2015 (757) To Read (328) Sto caricando le informazioni...
Iscriviti per consentire a LibraryThing di scoprire se ti piacerà questo libro. Attualmente non vi sono conversazioni su questo libro. - Il y’a une Amérique cachée à l’intérieur de celle que nous montrons au monde entier, et seul un petit groupe de fenw la voit véritablement. Certains d'entre nous sont enfermés dedans par leur naissance ou la géographie mais le reste d'entre nous on ne fait qu’y travailler. Médecins, infirmières, pompiers flics nous la connaissons. Nous travaillons parce que tout simplement ça fait partie de notre boulot. Nous en voyons les diverses strates, son injustice, son caractère inéluctable. Et pourtant nous livrons cette bataille perdue d’avance. Nous essayons de la contourner, et à l’occasion parfois nous la fuyons. (p279) ( ) An ambitious attempt to cover gang life in Los Angeles during the Rodney King riots in 1992, told from multiple first person perspectives. Like other reviewers, I was hooked by the first chapter, engaging instantly with Mexican cook Ernesto and shocked by his vicious murder, but just couldn't connect with the rest of the characters, from Ernesto's hard bitten teenage sister Lupe to a fireman caught up in the violence. Gattis tries for authenticity with Hispanic dialect and slang terms, overexplaining for white readers who have never watched a TV show or read another novel depicting street kids, yet fails to create a second sympathetic personality after Ernesto is killed. I got the theme - everyone is 'involved', both in gangs and in the lives and deaths of others - and the novel certainly generates a vivid portrait of six lawless days in Los Angeles, but I need more than action and violence, sorry. Also the little teenage 'homies' were faintly ridiculous, with their 'street names' like Clever and Trouble - hey, guess the coded origin behind those monikers, if you can! - and obsession with 'respect'. Ernesto's death in the first chapter is in retaliation for the accidental shooting of another gang member's sister, and then Ernesto's death is 'avenged' by his sister, kicking off an epic gangland battle of tit for tat - who or what is supposed to deserve respect in a group of high school dropouts with more bullets than brain cells? Nurse Gloria, who has to bribe private mortuary workers to come and pick up Ernesto's body from the gutter, and the fireman who watches his friend take a brick to the face are about the only sane voices in the story ('Excuse me if I never stopped to consider the motive of fucking gangbangers because I’m too busy dropping hose and ducking a chucked rock the size of a softball.') My other issue is with the first person narration - writing convincingly in one 'voice' is hard enough and Gattis has about fifteen different characters on the go, but either the narratives sounded the same or didn't match the characters who were supposed to be speaking. The dialect and slang slipped in and out depending on how much exposition the author was trying to fit into a chapter, and gang members were either explaining simple Spanish terms or waxing lyrical on the history of Los Angeles, breaking the literary fourth wall with the author's research. One character delivering a personal view interspersed with regular old third person would have worked better for me. Despite the 1990s timeline, the subject is sadly still socially relevant - there's a line about a twenty year cycle of riots that is only a year or two out - but I just couldn't connect with any of the characters. Interesting enough novel about life in East LA during the Rodney King riots. The technique of having each chapter written in the voice of a different character is hard to pull off. Unfortunately the voices in many of the chapters aren't persuasively different from each other, nor feel true to what the reader would expect for that character. nessuna recensione | aggiungi una recensione
Appartiene alle Collane EditorialiPremi e riconoscimentiElenchi di rilievo
"At 3:15 p.m. on April 29, 1992, a jury acquitted two Los Angeles Police Department officers charged with using excessive force to subdue civilian Rodney King, and failed to reach a verdict on the same charges involving a third officer. Less than two hours later, the city of LA, a powder keg of racial tension, exploded in violence as people took to the streets in a terrifying orgy of rioting that lasted six days. In 144 hours, sixty lives were lost. And then there were the murders outside of active rioting sites, committed by gangbangers who used the lawlessness of a city on fire to viciously settle scores. A gritty and cinematic work of sourced fiction, All Involved vividly recreates this turbulent and terrifying time through the stories of six interconnected lives caught up in extraordinary circumstances"-- Non sono state trovate descrizioni di biblioteche |
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Google Books — Sto caricando le informazioni... GeneriSistema Decimale Melvil (DDC)813.6Literature English (North America) American fiction 21st CenturyClassificazione LCVotoMedia:
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