East is 15 years-old and lives/works in the inner
city section of South Central Los Angeles called The Boxes, that’s about as
poverty stricken as can be. He has seen more than most of us ever see in a lifetime.
He’s in a gang; it’s works the midnight shift keeping watch over a drug den.
Most nights, after work, he breaks into an office building’s basement and sleeps,
undetected, under a box.
The gang’s leader, Fin, has a soft spot for East.
However, a soft spot in a drug dealer is much different than soft spots in
others.
The house is busted one night, but everyone gets
way. Fin has a new job for East: kill a judge who is the key eyewitness in an
upcoming trial. East, ready to be a man, steps up to the challenge. Following
Fin’s orders, he climbs in a ratty van along with three others: Michael Wilson,
oldest of the bunch; Walter, the fat kid, and Ty, East’s equally-hardened
younger brother. East has never been outside of his neighborhood, and the trip
is both frightening and exciting.
The quartet sets off for Wisconsin where the judge
is hiding until the trial begins. Author Bill Beverly does an amazing job of
making the reader feel as h/she is along for the ride. The trip takes about
half of the story, but Beverly does an excellent job in keep the sentences
fresh. Writing about driving halfway across the country and keeping it fresh,
even with their side adventure, is a masterful feat. Tension rides high on each
page.
The hit is completed, but there are complications.
Complications that have a lasting, deep impact on East. I can’t give too much
away, but East is at a crossroads. Does he go back to LA and live with the
consequences or does he stay in the Midwest and start over?
East winds up in Iowa, at a paintball range,
sleeping in the storage room under a box. Perry, the range’s owner, becomes
somewhat of a father figure to the young man. When East’s past resurfaces, it’s
up to him to determine his fate.
I think this was an amazing book. I don’t often care
to read book about gangs and violence, but this one captured my attention from
the opening paragraph. Beverly shows a lot of empathy toward East, who in many,
many ways reminded me of Richard Wright’s Bigger Thomas. Beverly writes with
such first-hand knowledge of an African-American teen, I was truly surprised to
discover that he is a white dude. Tagged as a young adult novel, Dodgers deftly crosses the line into
adult fiction.
I give Dodgers
5
out of 5 stars. I received this book from Blogging
for Books in exchange for this review.
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