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The radius of us  Cover Image E-book E-book

The radius of us

Summary: After being mugged, seventeen-year-old Gretchen is still struggling to deal with her fears when she meets Phoenix, an eighteen-year-old immigrant from El Salvador. Told in alternating first person points of view, this is a story of love, sacrifice, and the journey from victim to survivor. It offers an intimate glimpse into the causes and devastating impact of Latino gang violence, both in the U.S. and in Central America, and explores the risks that victims take when they try to start over. Most importantly, this shows how people struggling to overcome trauma can find healing in love.

Record details

  • ISBN: 9781250096906
  • ISBN: 1250096901
  • ISBN: 9781250096890
  • ISBN: 1250096898
  • Physical Description: remote
    1 online resource (295 pages) : illustrations.
  • Edition: First edition.
  • Publisher: New York : St. Martin's Griffin, 2017.

Content descriptions

Source of Description Note:
Print version record.
Subject: Mugging -- Fiction
Emigration and immigration -- Fiction
Illegal aliens -- Fiction
Brothers -- Fiction
Gangs -- Fiction
Love -- Fiction
Victims of crimes -- Juvenile fiction
Mugging -- Juvenile fiction
Emigration and immigration -- Juvenile fiction
Illegal aliens -- Juvenile fiction
Brothers -- Juvenile fiction
Gangs -- Juvenile fiction
YOUNG ADULT FICTION / People & Places / United States / Hispanic & Latino
Brothers
Emigration and immigration
Gangs
Illegal aliens
Mugging
Victims of crimes
Genre: Young adult fiction.
Romance fiction.
Love stories.
Electronic books.
Fiction.
Juvenile works.
Romance fiction.
Young adult works.

Electronic resources


  • Booklist Reviews : Booklist Reviews 2016 December #1
    Marquardt's latest is a gripping depiction of many of the issues facing Salvadorean refugees. Phoenix Flores Flores, 19, is a bright young man and former gang member determined to save his younger brother, Ari, from being forced into a gang. A traumatic journey through Mexico gets the brothers to Texas, where Ari, now mute, lives in a government-run shelter for refugees. Phoenix tries desperately to help from Florida, where he's been taken in by a kind lesbian couple. Meanwhile, 17-year-old Gretchen is struggling to recover from PTSD after a violent attack by a Latino gang member. Alternating first-person chapters from Phoenix and Gretchen describe their backstories and evolving situations as they meet and fall in love. But there's more to this intercultural romance: Marquardt's protagonists are complex and intriguing. Gretchen is both fiercely feminist and totally fearful after her attack; Phoenix is besotted and racked with guilt. Of special note is a terrific court transcript (with sketches by Ari) that effectively supplies missing puzzle pieces. Ari's sweetly satisfying epilogue provides a very happy ending. Copyright 2016 Booklist Reviews.
  • Horn Book Guide Reviews : Horn Book Guide Reviews 2017 Fall
    Gretchen (who has PTSD since being attacked and robbed) and Phoenix (who is in the U.S. awaiting a hearing for asylum after being forced to join a gang back in El Salvador) help each other heal from trauma. Alternating first-person chapters relate their (mostly) non-saccharine romance. Phoenix's story is especially compelling, avoiding stereotypes about immigrants, poverty, or Latin Americans. Occasional drawings add texture and verisimilitude. Copyright 2017 Horn Book Guide Reviews.
  • Horn Book Magazine Reviews : Horn Book Magazine Reviews 2017 #4
    Sometimes you don't realize you have PTSD until it's triggered. That is more or less the case for Gretchen, after she sees a young man walking a dog and he reminds her of the trauma she suffered recently, when she was attacked and robbed. The boy in question, however, is not the robber. He is a teen with his own trauma to deal with: having been forced to join a gang back in El Salvador, Phoenix is now living in the United States with a pending hearing for asylum. (His younger brother, who also crossed into the U.S. illegally with Phoenix, is living in foster care far away from Phoenix.) Though screaming and running when you first meet someone, as Gretchen did, is not usually the best method of getting acquainted, the two find themselves brought together and helping each other heal from the betrayals and grief each has suffered. The story is told in alternating first-person chapters; Phoenix's story is especially compelling and unique, avoiding stereotypes about immigrants, poverty, or Latin Americans. The ending is a fairy tale, but the rest of the romance is happily not saccharine. Occasional drawings (ostensibly by Phoenix's brother) add texture and verisimilitude. sarah hannah gómez Copyright 2017 Horn Book Magazine Reviews.
  • Kirkus Reviews : Kirkus Reviews 2016 November #2
    As in Dream Things True (2015), Marquardt explores the American dream, this time through the lenses of two traumatized teens. Gretchen, who's white, should be reveling in the moment as a high school senior. Instead, she's home-schooled since being robbed and assaulted in her Atlanta neighborhood has left her with debilitating panic attacks. In a nearby community, 18-year-old brown-skinned Phoenix, who escaped and rescued his younger brother, Ari, from gang violence in El Salvador, is staying with a compassionate lesbian couple while he awaits his day in court as an asylum seeker. Phoenix learned impeccable English from missionaries who established a bilingual school in his village, so he's able to communicate with Gretchen when they accidentally meet. Told in the teens' alternating voices, the enlightening story follows their growing relationship as they learn the traumatic experiences each has faced and help each other cope with them. The focus, however, is on Phoenix and Ari's grisly escape, witnessing acts that have left Ari mute in a juvenile detention facility, and their need to avoid returning to certain death in El Salvador. While the teens' relationship is tested when details from Phoenix's past coincide with Gretchen's case, a host of diverse characters lend a hand and offer varying perspectives. A rushed ending is only a small distraction in this otherwise eye-opening story. (Fiction. 14-18) Copyright Kirkus 2016 Kirkus/BPI Communications. All rights reserved.
  • School Library Journal Reviews : SLJ Reviews 2016 December
    Gr 9 Up—Seventeen-year-old Gretchen Asher's life has not been the same since she was mugged in a parking lot one night. The traumatic incident propelled her into a state of panic, and she is unable to go to school, socialize, or interact deeply with her boyfriend, Adam. Months later, while babysitting her niece and nephew in a neighborhood park, Gretchen spots a boy who looks nearly identical to her attacker. She is thrust back into the heart of fear, unaware that the boy, Phoenix, is in the midst of his own struggles. An 18-year-old immigrant from El Salvador, he has just spent four months escorting his brother to the United States to flee gang violence and is in danger of being deported. When circumstances cause Gretchen and Phoenix to continue meeting, they form an unexpected bond. While facing court trials, identity issues, and racial stereotyping, the teens bolster each other's courage. With the looming possibility of their permanent separation, the two must decide what is most important to them and what sacrifices are worth making. Tackling the issues of gang violence, immigration, mental health, and cultural bias, this is a compelling story that delivers profound messages through engaging, accessible prose. Both a page-turning romance and a comprehensive view of a young immigrant's experience, this novel is sure to encourage empathy and perspective among high school students. VERDICT A must-have for all YA collections.—Karin Greenberg, Queens College, NY. Copyright 2016 School Library Journal.
  • Voice of Youth Advocates Reviews : VOYA Reviews 2017 April
    High school senior Gretchen has been having panic attacks ever since she was accosted and robbed in a dark parking lot. The strange thing about the attack is that the young man seemed as terrified as she was when a car rushed up in the middle of it—he told her to run and took off himself. Gretchen has not been to school since, but when she meets Phoenix, an El Salvadoran refugee who reminds her of her attacker, she sets on a course of healing and regaining the ability to trust. Phoenix has his own problems, like getting his younger brother out of a youth detention center and convincing the authorities that to send the two of them back to El Salvador would mean certain death. Narrated by Gretchen and Phoenix in alternating chapters, this is a multicultural love story punctuated by the intensity of gang violence and the vulnerability of young refugees given over to the mercy of the courts. Phoenix seems, at times, too good to be true, speaking perfect English and instantly finding a job. Gretchen's panic attacks will resonate with readers who have or know someone who has suffered a trauma and have difficulty moving on. Teens who like gritty realistic fiction will both enjoy and be enlightened by this story of love and hope with a backdrop of issues that are relevant today.—Laura Lehner. 4Q 5P S Copyright 2017 Voya Reviews.

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