SITO: An American Teenager and the City that Failed Him

Laurence Ralph
Grand Central Publishing

In September of 2019, Luis Alberto Quiñonez—known as Sito— was shot to death as he sat in his car in the Mission District of San Francisco. He was nineteen. His killer, Julius Williams, was seventeen.

For Laurence Ralph, the stepfather of Sito’s half-brother who had dedicated much of his academic career to studying gang-affiliated youth, Sito’s murder forced him to revisit a subject of scholarly inquiry in a profoundly different, deeply personal way. Written from Ralph's perspective as both a person enmeshed in Sito's family and as an Ivy League professor and expert on the entanglement of class and violence, SITO is an intimate story with an important message about the lived experience of urban danger, and about anger, fear, grief, vengeance, and ultimately grace.

Read more at Grand Central Publishing/Hachette Book Group

Previous
Previous

Dark Days: Fugitive Essays

Next
Next

Fit Citizens: A History of Black Women's Exercise from Post-Reconstruction to Postwar America