Kids will grab this for the immediacy in the scenes, the brutal
standoffs, the fast talk at the ball court, and the elemental conflicts
of coming-of-age. -- Booklist
Shooting the breeze with his boys. Tightening his D on the court. Doing
a color check -- making sure nobody's wearing blue or red, which some
Crip or Piru carrying a cut-down golf club would see as disrespect. Then
back to Auntie's, hoping she isn't passed out from whiskey at the end of
the day. Now that Shawn is headed for high school, he wonders if he'd be
better off at the school in Mama's neighborhood, where he'd be free of
Compton's hassles. But then he wouldn't be with his fellas -- cracking
jokes, covering each other's backs -- or the fine Marisol, who's been
making star appearances in his dreams. Dad says he needs to make his own
decision, but what does Shawn want, freedom or friendship? With teasing,
spot-on dialogue and an eye to the realities of inner-city life,
Chameleon takes on the shifting moods of a teenager coming of age.