![]() ![]() Although the shocking conditions the boys endure are vividly and realistically depicted, this effort is overlong for the recommended audience of nine through 12, and many readers may give up before they reach the portion of the narrative where Gopal is imprisoned. Gopal is a likable child, and insight into the others boys’ believable characters gradually evolves. Determined to escape, Gopal befriends the others with his storytelling talents, building bonds that will be useful if an opportunity to flee arises. Long days of gluing beads onto picture frames, little food, stifling heat and occasional severe beatings with a rubber hose all keep the boys intimidated. Locked inside a decrepit building with five other despairing boys, Gopal quickly learns the routine. There, a slick older boy offers Gopal a factory job, then turns him over to a ruthless sweatshop operator. ![]() Eleven-year-old Gopal and his family, deeply in debt, flee to Mumbai to find work. The author returned to her native India to research this fictionalized exposé of child labor. ![]()
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