Critic Reviews
Good
Based on 5 reviews on
This intimate exploration of race and inequality in America tells the story of a journalist's long-time relationship with his mentee, Jorell Cleveland, through the Big Brothers Big Sisters program and investigates Jorell's tragic fatal shooting.
In 2005, soon after Ben Westhoff moved to St. Louis, he joined the Big Brothers Big Sisters program and was paired with Jorell Cleveland. Ben was twenty-eight, a white college grad from an affluent family. Jorell was eight, one of nine children from a poor, African American family living in nearby Ferguson. But the two instantly connected. Ben and Jorell formed a bond stronger than nearly any other in their lives. When Ben met the woman who'd become his wife, she observed that Ben and Jorell were "a package deal." They were brothers.In the summer of 2016, Jorell was shot at point blank range in broad daylight in the middle of the street, yet no one was charged in his death. Ben grappled with mourning Jorell, but also with a feeling of responsibility. As Jorell's mentor, what could he have done differently? As a journalist, he had reported on gang life, interviewed crime kingpins, and even infiltrated drug labs in China. But now, he was investigating the life and death of someone he knew personally and examining what he did and did not know about his friend. Learning the truth about Jorell and the man who killed him required Ben to uncover a heartbreaking cycle of poverty, poor education, drug trafficking, and violence. Little Brother brilliantly combines a deeply personal history with a true-crime narrative that exposes the realities of life in communities like Ferguson all around the country.
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Ben Westhoff tackles systemic problems through personal tragedy in 'Little Brother: Love, Tragedy, and My Search for the Truth' https://t.co/vSLTDK9MBN
Exec Dir, MO Workforce Housing Assn. @MO_Independent columnist: https://t.co/QVKvw7OPuT. Ex-MO Senator & public policy professor. Book: https://t.co/sjulUSEPjh; TED: https://t.co/2kXSmXTyFT
Tonight, my friend Ben Westhoff discusses his latest book "Little Brother" - his account of his investigation into the unsolved murder of his "little", who he mentored for over a decade via the Big Brothers, Big Sisters program. The book is disturbing but 100& worth reading. https://t.co/xXEOVvxDzT
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We'll see you tonight at Ethical Society St. Louis, 9001 Clayton Road, for Ben Westhoff. This is an appropriate time to talk about gun violence, which is relevant to the story of Jorell Cleveland that Westhoff tells in LITTLE BROTHER, too. Full event info: https://t.co/LoCR9ltjEY https://t.co/MbbRYvaua2
"Westhoff's new book, Little Brother: Love, Tragedy, and My Search for the Truth, is a memoir, a double bildungsroman, and a murder mystery. By combining these forms, it goes deeper than any one of them could.... The book opens a navigable passage between their separate worlds, and it goes below the surface characterizations, the stereotypes and assumptions that kill any honest discussion....Little Brother also makes a subtler point: that it is possible for two people to love each other across worldviews that do not sync. Jorell's life is as exhausting and dangerous as any double agent's. The details Westhoff uncovered teach us about his home terrain, about the geopolitics of isolation, about realpolitik and the limitations of allies.
"If a reporter had parachuted into this story, it would have ended up a flat, remote, predictable account of one more young Black man's death. But because Westhoff lived it, because he cared, he lets us wonder and puzzle and rage along with him."
--The Los Angeles Review of Books