About This Book
A young poor boy named Jerome navigates childhood in a rural community where scarcity and neighborly differences shape daily life. Intimate episodes show his solitary pleasures in the fields, small barterings of scraps and trinkets with better-clothed children, and moments of pride, hunger, and generosity. The narrative moves between outdoor play and domestic interiors, attending to women's labor, communal talk, and private hardships. Themes of poverty, dignity, social contrast, and childhood resourcefulness recur as relationships within the neighborhood develop and small acts reveal wider tensions and tenderness.
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