A review by midnightmarauder
Leaving Atlanta by Tayari Jones

emotional informative mysterious sad medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? Character
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes
  • Diverse cast of characters? Yes
  • Flaws of characters a main focus? Yes

5.0

Leaving Atlanta follows the story of three young children—LaTasha Baxter, Rodney Green, and Octavia Fuller—as they grow up in Atlanta, Georgia during the infamous Atlanta Child Murders. 

The book is split into three parts, which follow each child's point of view and is written in a different narrative point of view. Tasha's point of view is written in third-person; Rodney's is written in second-person; and Octavia's is written in first-person. 

This book touched on a few different issues. One of the main themes of the book is the concept of childhood innocence and how it can lead a child into varying pathways. For instance, Tasha desires to fit in with her classmates so much that it leads her into hanging with the wrong crowd. Rodney, who has an
abusive father
, is so fed up with his home life that when an
unnamed man pretending to be a police officer pulls up beside him
, he purposefully
gets in the car with him, never to be seen alive again
. Finally, Octavia, whose mother feels unsettled by the all the disappearances, is
sent away to live with her father in a different state, in attempt to protect her from being hurt


Another issue that was tackled in the novel is how black people are overlooked when it comes to disappearances and murders. Black children were coming up missing back to back during that time, yet very little external effort (i.e. law enforcement, government agencies, etc.) was made was spent trying to solve the cases or find the children. Most of the work done to get the children's faces on the news was made by the children's families and people within their neighborhoods. 

What I liked the most about this book is that it shed light on how the children felt during that time. The feelings of the children who didn't get abducted/murdered were definitely drown out by all of the commotion. It was nice to get a glimpse into how they might've felt, being told through the fictionalized stories of Tasha, Rodney, and Octavia. 

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