Nico wants to write his way out of his life, but does he have what it takes?
Seventeen-year-old Nico Kardos wants to be a writer. He also wants to go to Sarah Lawrence College and get away from his Bronx neighborhood of Hunts Point, where the girl he’d loved his whole life, Rosario Zamora, died from a heroin overdose six months earlier and where Javier, his younger half brother, is headed for a cruel, hard life in the local gang, the X-Tecas. One night Nico has what he believes to be a prophetic dream about his own death and the deaths of his mom and Javier. In the dream, Rosario appears and says something to him that he can’t recall when he wakes up. When Nico’s mother falls seriously ill just one week later, he wonders whether he can change his future—and whether he wants to. Is he fated to follow in Rosario’s footsteps? In this story that unfolds in the form of journal entries for his AP English class, Nico’s interior monologue feels raw and real, expressed in an authentic, youthful voice. The grittiness of his reality—absent fathers, the need for money, and the desire for bigger things—is at the core of award-winner Stork’s latest. At times the journal entries make narrative jumps that feel jolting, but the novel moves at a quick clip and is hard to put down. All major characters are Latine.
An honest, brutal exploration of reality.
(Fiction. 13-18)