Review by: Samantha M. Siciliano
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QUICK SUMMARY:
This book is the fourth installment of a series called Noughts and Crosses. In this series Blacks (Crosses) have privilege and higher status than Noughts (Whites). This book demonstrates what is still wrong after having freedom from slavery for about 70 years from the Crosses that held the noughts as slaves. This book spends time following Toby Durbridge, the neighbor boy close to Callie Rose’s age, and Callie Rose herself.
THE REVIEW
Writing a review for a series is probably one of the more difficult things that I have done in my lifetime. I want to just let all the information just spill from my mind onto the computer, but I can’t because then I will basically just rewrite the damn book!
Okay, so the focus characters that are in this book are Toby Durbridge and Callie Rose. Toby wants to have more money and a better lifestyle. Not just for him, but his family and girlfriend Callie Rose. In Meadowview, there are two gangs that run Toby and Callie’s neighborhoods and they are constantly in each other’s business trying to break the other. Toby is offered a gig delivering questionable packages for his friend Dan to make some massive amounts of cash. This is the gateway to a wild ride of double crossing and trying to survive. As for Callie, when she is hurt and in the hospital for some time, Toby struggles with who is and who he wants to be. The ending took me completely by surprise because of something mentioned in the very beginning and not being brought back up until the very end. I can say that this book was a quick read and for all the right reasons. I wanted more. I need more and I am so glad that there is a 5th book in the series!
Gang relations, personal relationships, race, and drugs. Families in the community stuck with gangsters because of the power and threats they hold over the community. Personal relationships are put to the test (especially trust). Race relations are still prevalent throughout the whole book. Drugs. Ruin communities, ruin families, ruin relationships. And drugs ran their nasty roots throughout the majority of the book.
I would rate this book a 5/5. I was absolutely glued to this book. I could not put it down and I kept telling myself “just one more chapter” after so many chapters. I absolutely cannot wait to get my hands on the 5th book to start reading.
IN CONCLUSION, READ THE FRACKING BOOK!
Up Next: Crossfire by Malorie Blackman