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The Tomorrow Game: Rival Teenagers, Their Race for a Gun, and a Community United to Save Them

The Tomorrow Game: Rival Teenagers, Their Race for a Gun, and a Community United to Save Them

by Sudhir Venkatesh

Simon & Schuster ·2022 ·304 pages ·Culture
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About This Book

A New York Times bestselling author's gripping account of a Chicago community coming together to save a group of teenagers from gun violence. In the tradition of works like Random Family and Behind the Beautiful Forevers , Sudhir Venkatesh's The Tomorrow Game is a deeply reported chronicle of families surviving in a Southside Chicago community. At the heart of the story are two Marshall Mariot, an introverted video gamer and bike rider, and Frankie Paul, who leaves foster care to direct his cousin's drug business while he's in prison. Frankie devises a plan to attack Marshall and his friends—it is his best chance to showcase his toughness and win respect for his crew. Catching wind of the plan, Marshall and his friends decide they must preemptively go after Frankie's crew to defend their honor. The pressure mounts as both groups of teens race to find a gun and strike first. All the while, the community at large—a cast that includes the teens' families, black market gun dealers, local pastors, a bodega owner and a veteran beat cop—try their best to defuse the conflict and keep the kids alive. Based on Venkatesh's three decades of immersion in Chicago's Southside, and as propulsive as a novel, The Tomorrow Game is a nuanced, timely look at the toll that poverty and gun violence take on families and their communities.


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Reviews

"A vital, inspiring, and occasionally maddening story of a community trying to regulate the number of guns on its streets."

Cory Oldweiler· The Boston Globe Read review ↗ Near the Top

"Venkatesh keeps the pace moving briskly without skimping on the complexity of his subjects."

Percy Child· Booklist Read review ↗ Near the Top

"A good choice for anyone interested in how troubled neighborhoods are policed and conflicts mediated."

Kirkus Read review ↗ Near the Top

"This is a dramatic and accessible deconstruction of the social conditions that give rise to criminal behavior."

Publishers Weekly Read review ↗ Near the Top

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