RISING FROM THE ASHES | Kirkus Reviews
A nuanced and necessary narrative.
An account of the 1992 Los Angeles uprising, focusing particularly on the stories of Rodney King, Latasha Harlins, and Eddie Lee.
Protests erupted in Los Angeles County in April 1992, following the shocking acquittal of four police officers accused of using excessive force in brutally beating King, an unarmed Black man, during a traffic arrest in March 1991. Latasha, a 15-year-old Black girl, also died in March 1991, after being fatally shot from behind by South Korean immigrant store owner Soon Ja Du following a dispute over a bottle of orange juice. Readers get to know King as a loving father, Latasha as a poet and honor student, and Du as a wife and mother working 14-hour days without respite. With tensions already high due to Du’s incredibly lenient sentencing in November 1991, violence exploded hours after the acquittal of King’s attackers a few months later. Eddie Lee, an 18-year-old Korean American college student, went with friends—against his mother’s wishes—to help protect Koreatown shops that were going up in flames and was shot to death, caught in the crossfire between demonstrators and store owners and becoming a symbol of the tragedy. Using scores of interviews, direct quotes, news reports, and archival photographs to sculpt this thoroughly researched history, Yoo vividly and movingly conveys the broader historical context and the many lives that were affected, shedding light on systemic challenges that continue today.
A nuanced and necessary narrative.
(maps, author’s note, in memoriam list, endnotes, bibliography, credits, index)
(Nonfiction. 12-18)
Pub Date: today
ISBN: 9781324030904
Page Count: 400
Publisher: Norton Young Readers
Review Posted Online: Feb. 17, 2024
Kirkus Reviews Issue: March 15, 2024
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