This section contains 227 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |
["Down These Mean Streets"] is both vigorous and compelling. A very uneven book, it is nonetheless consistently readable….
"Down These Mean Streets" is coarse and crude. But this is perhaps as it should be. Life for the Piri Thomases of the United States is not pleasant and cultivated. It is primitive and base….
Despite the rapidity with which the book concludes, the pages devoted to Piri's prison term and his final shaking of the drug habit once he is out of prison are a magnificent testament of how man can overcome not only his own handicaps, but also the even more blatant obstacles put in his path by others….
Through Piri Thomas's rough-hewn words shines a new voice, one which may well add significant chapters to ethnic literature in the United States. The struggle of those living in Spanish Harlem appears to have found a chronicler. There is...
This section contains 227 words (approx. 1 page at 300 words per page) |