A Nation of Amor
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- $9.99
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- $9.99
Publisher Description
In the West Town area of Chicago, pushed from neighborhood to neighborhood to the burned-out back end of the city, the Puerto Rican Latin Kings gang reigns supreme. Begun in the 1960s by the three brothers of the Matos family, Angel, Bobo, and Reynaldo, the original Latin Kings protected Puerto Rican families from other gangs. Since then, Bobo was elected a city councilman, Reynaldo did time for his involvement with a radical political group, and Angel was shot dead during a race riot. As in royalty, Latin King leadership passed on to Angel’s eldest son Flaco.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Life among Puerto Rican gangs in Chicago's Westtown ghetto forms the backdrop of McConnell's energetic debut. Like other young novelists (Jess Mowry comes to mind), McConnell, a native of Chicago's West Side, strives to capture the spirit and accent of street life, sensing that something vital to our culture is taking place among underclass youth. His story is more historic and dynastic, however: it begins in the 1960s, when three brothers--Angel, Reynaldo and Bobo Matos--begin a gang called the Latin Kings. Angel is shot dead in a race riot, Reynaldo goes to jail and Bobo survives to become a city councilman. As Angel's children Mano and Flaco grow up, the eldest, Flaco, is expected to lead the Latin Kings; when he refuses, Mano shoots his brother in the arm, then assumes the role himself. The divided brothers are challenged when Reynaldo is finally released from prison and returns to the neighborhood to do rehabilitative social work. While the tough situations his characters face (teen pregnancy, gangs, incest, drug use, crime and, ultimately, jail) are of great importance to McConnell's plot, the energy of his writing lies elsewhere: in the jazzy riffs and odd segues of each character's consciousness, particularly those of Mano's battered young girlfriend Mariza. One marvels at how McConnell gets inside the minds of struggling Latino teens on the shores of Lake Michigan.