"This is not an easy read, but is an extremely deep look at life for a runaway young teen"
In the 1980s her father abandoned twelve years old Korean-
American Joon-Mee and her mother; he was unable to cope
with the increased craziness of his wife and still held
her culpable for their leaving their country four years
earlier. When her mom turns even more helpless with her
midnight hole digging activity and is in denial that she
everything is messed up except for the humiliation and
economic disaster, Joon-Mee flees the Bronx for
Manhattan. The runaway becomes a hooker and escort. Soon heroin becomes part of the repertoire. She makes
friends on the streets, but understands the code that no
one has your back although male prostitute Wink mentors
her on surviving the "Johns, the homeless, and the
competitors. Benny, who has a regular job as an orderly,
is nice to her when he is not too high; when he is he can
be a nasty cutter. Life on the street is rough and fast
with even the strong ultimately unable to survive. This is not an easy read, but is an extremely deep look at
life for a runaway young teen. The story line mostly
focuses on Joon-Mee but also enables the reader to see how
her mentor Knowledge and others survive at shelters and on
the meanest streets. This is cutthroat capitalism at its
purest; just like the extreme right wing envision Readers
will be stunned with the graphic details of survival in an
urban jungle in which your stalking predator may be
sleeping in the cot next too or may be your latest John. Harriet Klausner
Reviewed by Harriet Klausner
Posted November 24, 2008
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