Kicking the Sky
Autor Anthony De Saen Limba Engleză Paperback – 24 mar 2014
It was 1977 when a shoeshine boy, Emanuel Jaques, was brutally murdered in Toronto. In the aftermath of the crime, twelve-year-old Antonio Rebelo explores his neighborhood s dark garages and labyrinthine back alleys along with his rapscallion friends.As the media unravels the truth behind the Shoeshine Boy murder, Antonio sees his immigrant family--and his Portuguese neighborhood--with new eyes, becoming aware of the frightening reality that no one is really taking care of him. So intent are his parents and his neighbors on keeping the old traditions alive that they act as if they still live in a small village, not in a big city that puts their kids in the kind of danger they would not dare imagine.Antonio learns about bravery and cowardice, life and death, and the heart s capacity for love--and for cruelty--in this stunning novel."
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Specificații
ISBN-10: 156512927X
Pagini: 320
Dimensiuni: 137 x 206 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.32 kg
Editura: ALGONQUIN BOOKS OF CHAPEL HILL
Textul de pe ultima copertă
Kicking the Sky dares to tell the story about the messy dark side of a big city through the clear eyes of a twelve-year-old boy . . . A courageous novel. Jim Lynch, author of Truth Like the Sun
It was 1977 when a shoeshine boy, Emanuel Jaques, was brutally murdered in Toronto. In the aftermath of the crime, twelve-year-old Antonio Rebelo explores his neighborhood s dark garages and labyrinthine back alleys along with his rapscallion friends.
As the media unravels the truth behind the Shoeshine Boy murder, Antonio sees his immigrant family--and his Portuguese neighborhood--with new eyes, becoming aware of the frightening reality that no one is really taking care of him. So intent are his parents and his neighbors on keeping the old traditions alive that they act as if they still live in a small village, not in a big city that puts their kids in the kind of danger they would not dare imagine.
Antonio learns about bravery and cowardice, life and death, and the heart s capacity for love--and for cruelty--in this stunning novel.
The intensity and fragility of boys on the cusp of adolescence is vividly captured, as is the portrait of a community whose insularity is both its strength and its weakness. Shyam Selvadurai, author of The Hungry Ghosts
Impressive . . . [De Sa] has given us a beguiling coming-of-age story--harked back to an event that shocked the country and had massive repercussions--and at the same time managed to beautifully capture a community and an era. The Toronto Globe and Mail
Kicking the Sky bridges its polarized worlds, staying true to the humanity in each. It s one of the best things fiction can do. The National Post (Canada)