Review of The Carny Kid
by BookPleasures.com
The Carny Kid: Survival of a Young Thief
Author: Kenneth Kahn The following review was contributed by Norm
Goldman
Editor of
Bookpleasures.com
The success or failure of first person accounts invariably depends on
how effectual are the narrative powers of the author. How often have we
read the first few pages of someone’s autobiography and grumbled- this is
torture and downright boring. Such, however, is not the case with Kenneth
Kahn’s The Carny Kid: Survival of a Young Thief. This is a book packed to
the rim with revelatory memories of the author’s painful childhood,
growing up as the only Jewish kid in the project neighborhood of East Los
Angeles, known as Ramona Gardens. Kahn candidly and courageously opens
up and shares his perspectives concerning his dysfunctional family that
centered on his heroin addicted parents, poverty, child neglect, crime,
loneliness, surviving attacks by street gangs, his bout with polio,
rejection, and his touring during the summer months with his parents, who
worked the annual carnival scene in various US and Canadian towns.
Perhaps, the most endearing aspect of the book is the recognition that
knowledge is power, as he discovered a whole new world in books and
school. As the author states: “no matter how bad things got at home or how
desperately broke we were, the beautiful campus offered a safe haven. For
five years, it had been my savior, my security blanket…” It is within the
confines of the school walls, where Kahn found solace from the tragic
experiences he was obliged to endure. The author’s insider information
pertaining to the shocking and routine scams perpetuated on naïve
customers playing the games of chance at the annual carnivals are eye
openers. In fact, as Kahn points out, there were some scams that were so
inherently evil that they required special permission from local
law-enforcement to even set them up on the fair grounds. I doubt if these
revelations will be well received by the petty thieves that operate these
scams! Kahn’s no-nonsense first person account is tragically one of
many, as evidenced by the thousands of cases of run-away children coming
from homes similar to his. No doubt, the narrative will captivate some
readers and reduce others to tears, however, let us hope in the end an
invaluable lesson will be learned—if you persevere and devote endless
effort, you can achieve victories that many of us take for granted.
|