The Knife and the Butterfly

The Knife and the Butterfly is a young-adult novel by Ashley Hope Pérez, published in 2011 by Carolrhoda Books. The novel, which explores the lives of two teenage gang members in Houston, a Hispanic boy named Azael and a White girl named Lexi, is based on a 2006 gang-related death in that city.

Kirkus Reviews stated "The author demonstrates why gangs appeal to many teens with family problems without glorifying the violence that often accompanies their activities."[1] Pérez stated, "Above all, I wanted to show Azael and Lexi's world as much more than just a patchwork of crime and violence."[2] She also stated that she wanted to show "these two teens' vulnerability and their potential for redemption" in addition to the "danger of poor choices" and the "real threat of their circumstances".[3]

Juan Castillo of NBC News wrote that this book and another one of Pérez's novels, What Can't Wait, explore what it means to grow up as a Hispanic or Latino teenager in the United States "amid difficult circumstances."[4]

Plot

The novel, set in Houston, is about a 15-year old Salvadoran American MS-13 gang member named Martín "Azael" Arevalo. He wakes up in a prison cell and observes 17-year old White American Alexis "Lexi" Allen,[1] who is member of another gang, Crazy Crew. As the novel unfolds he begins to recover his memory and learn whether the upcoming trial will be his or hers.[5] Azael slowly gains sympathy for Lexi, even though he originally hates her.[1] The book reveals that on June 16, 2011 Azael died in a gang fight in Montrose,[6] at Ervan Chew Park.[7] Lexi had killed him; she initially maintains self-dense at the trial,[8] but confesses to wanting to prove herself to Crazy Crew, and that Azael was not actually trying to kill her.[9]

Characters

Background

Ervan Chew Park, the site of the real life death of Gabriel Granillo, is in the book the site of Azael's death

This novel was based on the 2006 death of Gabriel Granillo.[22] The title originates from the Houston Chronicle series The Butterfly and the Knife, which chronicled the real life case. Pérez switched the order of the words "Knife" and "Butterfly" in order to attract male readers. Copyrights do not extend to titles, so Pérez was able to use the Chronicle title.[23]

Pérez, a graduate of the University of Texas at Austin and a teacher at Chávez High School in Houston,[23] researched MS-13 and Houston's Salvadoran community. One aspect in the novel is the differing use of Spanish. The younger Salvadoran Americans have influence from other Spanish dialects while the older ones have signature elements of Salvadoran Spanish such as the use of "vos".[2]

Reception

Castillo described this book as "acclaimed".[4]

Teri Hennessy of Library Media Connection wrote that the novel "is a well-written, compelling story".[5]

Randy Ribay of The Horn Book Guide wrote that "Although the gritty voice and intriguing story builds suspense, the clichéd revelation is disappointing".[24]

Kirkus Reviews stated that a Spanish glossary would have been good for the book, but ultimately it is "An unflinching portrait with an ending that begs for another reading."[1]

Jesse Gray wrote in The ALAN Review that "Perez gives the reader sympathetic yet critical insight into the world of gangs in Houston, Texas, and is careful to show the narratives of loss that drive so many young people to join them."[12]

See also

Other novels by Pérez:

References

Notes

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "THE KNIFE AND THE BUTTERFLY" (Archive). Kirkus Reviews. January 1, 2012. Posted online December 14, 2011. Retrieved on November 6, 2015.
  2. 1 2 Pérez, p. 206.
  3. Pérez, p. 206-207.
  4. 1 2 Castillo, Juan. "Ashley Hope Pérez's 'Out of Darkness': Young Love Amid Racism, Segregation" (Archive). NBC News. September 1, 2015. Retrieved on November 8, 2015.
  5. 1 2 Hennessy, Teri. "The Knife and the Butterfly" (Young adult review)(Brief article)(Book review). Library Media Connection, May–June, 2012, Vol.30(6), p.69(1).
  6. Pérez, p. 195.
  7. Pérez, p. 89.
  8. Pérez, p. 201.
  9. Pérez, p. 202 (See search page) "He wasn't trying to hurt me when I did it. He wasn't even holding the bat.” Even as her own lawyer was objecting to her testimony, Allen continued her tearful account. “I wanted to prove to my homeboys that I was strong. It happened so fast."
  10. 1 2 Pérez, p. 196. "Arevalo is survived by his brother, Eduardo; sister, Regina; father, Manuel, and other relatives. His mother Rosa died shortly after the birth of his sister Regina, and his father has lived in El Salvador since being deported from the U.S.[...]"
  11. Pérez, p. 131. "She tells me the place is in the Montrose and acts like I should be all happy to go to Lamar High.[...]"
  12. 1 2 Gray, Jesse (Nashville, Tennessee). "The Knife and the Butterfly by Ashley Hope Perez" (review) in "Clip & File YA Book Reviews" (Archive). The ALAN Review, Assembly on Literature for Adolescents of the National Council of Teachers of English (available at Virginia Tech University). Volume 40, Number 1, Fall 2012. Retrieved on November 11, 2015.
  13. Pérez, p. 16.
  14. 1 2 Pérez, p. 173.
  15. Pérez, p. 15. "Until I met Becca.[...]"
  16. Pérez, p. 37.
  17. Pérez, p. 173. "It's the first time she hasn't called her mom “Shauna,” at least as long as I've been watching."
  18. Pérez, p. 149.
  19. Pérez, p. 202.
  20. Pérez, Google Books PT81. "I think about Lexi on the street with her pinche dog crapping[...]Theo's dead. Theo's dead because of me."
  21. Pérez, p. 124-125
  22. Pérez, p. 205.
  23. 1 2 "A Q&A with Ashley Hope Pérez, Author of “The Knife and the Butterfly”" (Archive). The University of Texas at Austin. Retrieved on November 7, 2015.
  24. Ribay, Randy. "Perez, Ashley Hope: The Knife and the Butterfly.(Brief article)(Book review)(Young adult review)." The Horn Book Guide, Fall, 2012, Vol.23(2), p.110(1).

Further reading

External links

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