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Someone is painting bodies on Philadelphia's Broad Streetone more boldly drawn chalk outline every time another life is lost to the violence of the drug wars. A sixteen-year-old dealer; a priest; a nine-year-old girl. The images pile through the summer and fall, moving closer each day to the doorstep of City Hall.
Ofelia Santoro rides her bicycle over the bodies and through the dark, decaying streets of the neighborhood known to police as the Badlands. She is looking for her fourteen-year-old son, Gabriel, who disappeared a month earlier. His father skipped two years ago, and she's been losing her boy ever since.
Gabriel got his first job when he was twelve, as a lookout, spotting cops for the coke sellers working the car trade. Now he's a dealer himself, the youngest guy in the Black Cap gang, holding down the most dangerous corner and hiring his own lookouts. He feels guilty getting kids involved the same way he got involved, but he needs them, or he'll be caught.
Gabriel tries to outrun the neighborhood, taking cover with a drifter who is the father he might have had. But Gabriel is already trapped, at the mercy of Diablo, the ugliest of the dealers, a man who kills for fun.
Steve Lopez's plot, dialogue, and pacing are masterful. With searing precision, he portrays a world of evil so routine that its seems inevitable. Yet Lopez endows his characters with such humanity that redemption and radiance lighten this darkness. Third and Indiana is an extraordinarily compelling and powerful debut.
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Previews available in: English
Subjects
Fiction, Runaway teenagers, Drug traffic, Mothers and sons, Teenage boys in fiction, Teenage boys, Runaway teenagers in fiction, Mothers and sons in fiction, Drug traffic in fiction, Domestic fiction, Reading Level-Grade 11, Reading Level-Grade 12, Fiction, general, Pennsylvania, fiction, Philadelphia (pa.), fiction, Mothers and sons, fictionPlaces
Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, Philadelphia (Pa.)Book Details
First Sentence
"The weather came up from the south, a warm passing rain that left the October sky clear and the pavement steaming, and from a distance it looked as though the woman on the bicycle, her black skirt rippling in the liquid breeze, was riding through the clouds."
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- Created April 29, 2008
- 7 revisions
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November 17, 2022 | Edited by ImportBot | import existing book |
August 5, 2010 | Edited by IdentifierBot | added LibraryThing ID |
April 24, 2010 | Edited by Open Library Bot | Fixed duplicate goodreads IDs. |
April 16, 2010 | Edited by bgimpertBot | Added goodreads ID. |
April 29, 2008 | Created by an anonymous user | Imported from amazon.com record |