Always Running: La Vida Loca: Gang Days in L.A.
V**F
Interesting
A deep view into gang life, misguided youth, poverty, drams and hope. The author takes the reader into his world, through his eyes.
K**L
Amazing Book 📖❤️
I highly recommend buying this book. I was assigned to read this book for my college class on Chicano studies, I really enjoy reading the book it was very powerful and eye-opening. I also recommend getting the audiobook to, it makes you get more engaged with the reading/book and it become more meaningful especially when he is the the one reading it.💖
J**N
Multifaceted and Important Book Dripping with Lived-In Human Experience
Always Running is an engaging and intelligent look into the socio-political factors that have led to the proliferation of street gangs in the last century in areas where large percentages of citizens have few opportunities but plentiful obstacles, told through the firsthand experiences of former gang member and now activist, Luis Rodriguez, as he grows up as an oppressed minority in the over-policed, but under-protected, gang-haven of East LA. Though his story is fairly common—his parents moved from Mexico to LA to improve their lives and in spite of their best efforts weren’t able to protect their son from getting absorbed into the world of gangs surrounding him—it’s how he tells the story that makes this book unique and valuable. Rodriguez doesn’t romanticize the gang lifestyle of drugs, women, and crime the way that other writers might do. Rather, Rodriguez uses real human emotion and insight to explain the sheer horrors of this lifestyle in an attempt to deter any kids from wanting to live it.Though Always Running is a personal account of Rodriguez’s gang activity and later activism, it’s as much a historical account of the factors that led to the rise of gangs in LA in the 20th Century—and he blends the two perfectly. We see how those factors are similar to those that led Rodriguez to join a gang himself. He didn’t join because he wanted to do drugs, have power, and kill people, he joined because, if he didn’t, he’d be more vulnerable to being beaten, robbed, and/or killed growing up as an oppressed minority in a dangerous and chaotic world. A gang affiliation meant protection—but it also meant identity. Mexicans have long faced discrimination in this country, and many joined gangs as a way to celebrate their heritage of struggle. The book is filled with great quotes that explain this identity: “I’d walk into the counselor’s office for whatever reason and looks of distain greeted me—one meant for a criminal…It was harder to defy this expectation than just accept it…It was a jacket I could try to take off, but they kept putting it back on…So why not be proud? Why not be an outlaw? Why not make it our own?”Though the book exposes a lot of ugliness, one of the major themes Rodriguez explores is his pride in Chicano heritage, and how this pride eventually inspired him to give up the gang lifestyle. When he’s able to explore his identity in more positive ways, such as through joining Chicano pride groups, painting murals, and writing about his experiences, Rodriguez slowly starts to leave the gang lifestyle behind, and in doing so, he begins to see through its shallowness and pointlessness. Though it may give kids protection and a feeling of pride, he shows how those doing the “protecting” may be the very people who you need protection from when you question their lifestyle and how silly their pride is when it comes at the expense of selling your own soul. Luckily for Rodriguez, he was able to escape this lifestyle, which is not something many of his friends could say. Death is always around every corner, and every turn of the page, and so few kids like Rodriguez are able to live long enough to see through this lifestyle and develop into productive members of society.One of the most valuable parts of this book is its socio-political message about the horrible affects the oppression of minorities has on a society, and this message is as current and poignant today as it was when the book was written. Rodriguez explains how systemic racism was used throughout the history of LA to keep certain minority groups poor, disenfranchised, and controlled by their oppressors, and how this not only hurts the minority groups, but also hurts the oppressors. Society creates gangs then lives in fear of being attacked by them and police brutality results. It’s impossible today to turn on the news and avoid stories of policemen and women harassing, intimidating, assaulting, and sometimes, killing, specific demographics of US citizens for no other reason than their skin color, religious affiliation, national origins… This books is filled with so many examples of horrific crimes committed by police officers that it's hard not to be outraged. Granted, most of these crimes were committed against gang members, but these gang members were mostly misguided kids, and the cops, who are adults who’ve sworn to protect and defend US citizens, oftentimes cause more violence and crime than the gang members. Again, Rodriguez has a lot of great quotes to explain this: “In the barrio, the police are just another gang…Shootings, assaults and skirmishes between the barrios are direct results of police activity. Even drug dealing. I know this. Everybody knows this.” Quotes like this show why the Black Lives Matter movement is so important, and how it didn’t just emerge out of some bubble—the problem has always been here, and the more that people read books like Always Running, the better chances we have as a society to address it.Part poetic personal story, part engaging historical lesson, part inspiration tale of redemption, part exultation of Chicano heritage, part poignant work of socio-political activism, Always Running is a multifaceted book dripping with live-in human experience and emotion, and I highly recommend it to everyone who cares about improving the world they live in.
M**N
Thanks for sharing your life to the world
It’s a relatable book, growing up around frog town, glassel park, sereno, Lincoln heights to El Monte around 1988-1995. Living in poverty w all my family from Mexico, crowded, to at times wearing my grandmas shoes to school not understanding why my life was so different. Poverty does influence your surroundings, I thought I was a little cholita wearing Cortez, corduroy pants and my teases up hair, going to school w a chain because I was told some high school girls from monte Flores were going to jump me after school Just because I had just moved from el sereno. I was only in 7th grade so I was super scared. Partied and a few projects, had a gun pointed to my head for partying at 18th street neighborhood with a party crew. Many don’t understand that you don’t go looking for trouble it’s the culture and you had to be aware of these things. I wouldn’t change my life though call me crazy it’s made me who I am. Discrimination will always exist but it’s the shifting of your mind that will dictate how it will take over you. We are not slaves unless we surrender. This book was amazing !!!
B**T
Community Day School Required Reading
In Sacramento, I have worked with many students with probation histories. They're more attracted to a modern Los Angeles gang-life memoir like Monster by Sanyika Shakur, but there's plenty here to hold their interest. My students will tell me it's not all Crips and Bloods with gangs, and a cursory search through the United Gangs website is a testament to that. The same goes for Luis Rodriguez's descriptions of Chicano gangs in the '60s; the names of the gangs are ones most of us would not recognize. But he does a beautiful job making their world visceral. For someone who grew up throughout parts Southern California, I was hooked from opening with the prospects of a family being split apart at Union Station in Los Angeles. There are invaluable recollections of what is was like for a Latino family to make their way in Watts, Reseda, and San Gabriel over 50 years ago. What constituted a "beach" getaway tugs at the heart, as well as the experiences of Chicano youth at a real Southern California beach.
W**R
The book speaks to me.......a getto girl from 60s
Growing up in Valencia Gardens in SF in the. 50s and 60s I experienced much of the same things. I watched the heavily Hispanic and black population divided and angry. I watched a drug dealer I adored and idolized stab a man to death in front of me and then turn to 7 yo old me and say "smiley you didn't see anything did you?" I had few role models and even fewer friends. I hid from Sicorro and his cousins threats of rape on daily basis and stepped over the needles in my way. What saved me? I was blue eyed any blond and only had to survive long enough to get out. I was Mexican or black when I needed to be and believe me I was never white. I cried when I read the books that inspired Luis, Manchild In The Promise Land was the book that lit a fire in me as well.I had no idea however that Los Angeles was so much worse, I remember visiting around the time Luis writes about and remember not believing the warnings.I am so happy to hear the author made it out on his own and not only survived but grew into a leader, so many others did not.Marsha Converse
M**Y
Interesting Insight. No particular plot.
A chronological run down of his youth as a Mexican immigrant kid in USA. No significant plot or arch, other than his road to getting on the right path in life. Just his story. Interesting insight despite no particular point to the story.
G**.
Pairs nicely with Smile Now Cry later by Freddy Negrete
Gritty and honest telling of gang life, picked it up alongside Freddy Negrete’s book.
V**D
Gran libro
Increíble la vida de este hombre y la calidad de su narración, una persona excepcional que nos cuenta unas circunstancias vitales que también deberían ser excepcionales pero que desgraciadamente son cada vez más frecuentes en esta sociedad de diferencias crecientes.
I**U
Excellent
Une très belle leçon de vie et de culture américaine. Excellent lorsqu'on souhaite s'entraîner à la compréhension de l'oral, car l'auteur offre une lecture très claire et a un débit très modéré.
J**X
Book
Very good book very interesting
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