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  1. There Are No Children Here Summary. For two years, from the summers of 1987 to 1989, journalist Alex Kotlowitz follows the lives of two young children, Lafeyette and Pharoah Rivers, who live in a public housing complex in Chicago. When Kotlowitz first writes about them, Pharoah is nine and Lafeyette twelve. They live at the Henry Horner Homes ...

  2. Plot Summary. There Are No Children Here, written by Alex Kotlowitz, is the true story of the Rivers family, struggling to overcome the adversity of living in Chicago in the late 1980s and early 1990s. Different chapters of the book focus on individual members of the family, with the lion’s share of attention going to three male children in ...

  3. Alex Kotlowitz’s second book, The Other Side of the River (1998), focuses more specifically on race than There Are No Children Here.It uses two neighboring yet racially opposed Michigan towns as an illustration of a problem that affects the country as a whole: the conflict of narratives and the difficulty of fostering communication and empathy between whites and blacks in the US.

    • Alex Kotlowitz
    • 1992
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  5. Lafeyette and Pharoah are two young children living in a housing complex in Chicago. Alex Kotlowitz, a journalist, follows their stories from the year 1987 to 1989. Pharoah is nine years old, and Lafeyette is twelve. The two live in an establishment in the Henry Horner Homes complex, commonly referred to as part of the ghetto.

    • Alex Kotlowitz
  6. Analysis. Nine-year-old Pharoah, his twelve-year-old brother Lafeyette, and their friends are climbing through dirt and vegetation to reach the railroad tracks near their housing complex. The railroad connects downtown Chicago to the suburbs and, when the group reaches the tracks, Pharoah stops to admire the vision of downtown Chicago in the ...

  7. There Are No Children Here by Alex Kotlowitz chronicles the true story of two brothers coming of age in the Henry Horner public housing project in Chicago over a two year period. Lafeyette and Pharoah Rivers, their mother and siblings struggle to survive gun battles, gang influences, overzealous police officers, and overburdened and mismanaged ...

  8. There Are No Children Here is a combination of reporting, urban nonfiction, and biographical writing. Title. The title comes from a quote by LaJoe Rivers commenting on the bleakness of her children's livelihood. But you know, there are no children here. They've seen too much to be children. - LaJoe Rivers, 1988 Awards

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