Reader Score
74%
74% of readers
recommend this book
Critic Reviews
Great
Based on 6 reviews on
Four teenage boys are high school seniors at two very different schools within the city of Los Angeles, the second largest school district in the nation with nearly 700,000 students. Author Jeff Hobbs, writing with heart, sensitivity, and insight, stunningly captures the challenges and triumphs of being a young person confronting the future--both their own and the cultures in which they live--in contemporary America.
Combining complex social issues with the compelling experience of the individual, Hobbs takes us deep inside these boys' worlds. The foursome includes Carlos, the younger son of undocumented delivery workers, who aims to follow in his older brother's footsteps and attend an Ivy League college; Tio harbors serious ambitions to become an engineer despite a father who doesn't believe in him; Jon, devoted member of the academic decathalon team, struggles to put distance between himself and his mother, who is suffocating him with her own expectations; and Owen, raised in a wealthy family, can't get serious about academics but knows he must.
Filled with portraits of secondary characters including friends, peers, parents, teachers, and girlfriends, this masterwork of immersive journalism is both intimate and profound and destined to ignite conversations about class, race, expectations, cultural divides, and even the concept of fate. Hobbs's portrayal of these young men is not only revelatory and relevant, but also moving, eloquent, and indelibly powerful.
Highlights from the PW Reviews department, which reviews about 9,000 books per year, tweeted by the editors: reviews, author interviews and profiles.
'Children of the State: Stories of Survival and Hope in the Juvenile Justice System' by Jeff Hobbs. Bestseller Hobbs ('Show Them You’re Good') offers a gripping and harrowing study of the American juvenile justice system. https://t.co/BtZMbNBDyf https://t.co/ziWcwtRWxi
Since 1846, publisher of F. Scott Fitzgerald, Ernest Hemingway, Stephen King, Jesmyn Ward, Anthony Doerr, Jennifer Egan, Siddhartha Mukherjee, & more.
Catch #ShowThemYoureGood and #TheShortandTragicLifeofRobertPeace author @jeffhobbs42 on a Resilience Memoir Panel for @LitFestPasadena on May 14: http://spr.ly/6016zyv9n https://t.co/LOdYMBvzR3
"Kudos to Jeff Hobbs for immersing himself in an experience that few of us would care to revisit. His sensitive, beautifully rendered portraits of nine boys at two LA high schools are full of humor and insight."
--Mark Bowden, author of The Last Stone and Hue 1968
"This is a fascinating and engrossing look at America today that focuses on the pressures and inequalities of opportunity affecting high school students as they work to gain access to the best college they can afford. It's also a book filled with joy, heartbreak, and love as we meet the parents, siblings, teachers, and friends who accompany these four on their journey from boys to men."
--Will Schwalbe, New York Times bestselling author of The End of Your Life Book Club and Books for Living
"Show Them You're Good is fair, painstakingly reported, suspenseful, ethical, and, above all, empathetic. Hobbs is obviously a remarkably good listener; these boys opened up to him because he earned their trust. The result was that he made me care--really care--about them."
--Anne Fadiman, author of The Spirit Catches You and You Fall Down
"This book is such a deeply intimate and deeply moving coming-of-age story, one that wouldn't let me go--and one that left me rooting for these boys, hoping that each of them finds their footing in the world. Once again, Jeff Hobbs has pulled off a remarkable triumph of empathy."
--Alex Kotlowitz, author of An American Summer
"With [Hobbs's] fly-on-the-wall reporting style, life happens and the boys emerge fully themselves: driven, funny, sweet, wise, terrified, excited. A uniquely illuminating window onto the lives of young people in the midst of a hugely consequential year." --Booklist
"Hobbs gained [the boys'] trust, so he was able to examine their motivations and private fears in a manner that reveals them as both unique and, in many ways, typical of their age, culture and place...Hobbs wisely does not draw conclusions, since life is for living and there is much on the horizon for his young protagonists." --Bookreporter
"[The] young men [in Hobbs's book are] smart and curious, alert to the absurdity of adult life, keenly aware of grownups' hypocrisy, and determined not to be seen as clichés. They faced all the messy realities of life -- illness, poverty, unreliable parents -- and 'pushed ahead anyway, in the very best way.'" --Boston Globe
"A well-written and utterly compelling read." --Nicholas Sparks in Parade Magazine