Miles Kowin wrote on his book "Still We We Rise" how he studied murder in the South Central region. In the murder case, the boy was shot dead by the gangsters. The detective thought he was another gang, but they noticed that he was not. He is a senior high school student and I participated in a genius program. After the murder, Miles Corwin decided to write this book. Because we write not only about gang but also about other children who want to succeed and who have to overcome obstacles in life.
Miles Corwin is a writer of the Los Angeles Times and a reporter for former criminals. His constant theme at the time was LAPD and murder in the South Central of Los Angeles. He is from Los Angeles. He graduated from the University of California at Santa Barbara and received a Master's degree from the University of Missouri. Faculty of Journalism. He has won numerous awards and three non-fiction novels are bestseller's authors: the killing season, we especially rise and murder. Currently I teach literature journalism at the University of California, Irvine.
Miles Kowin graduated from high school in the grade of 1996-97 and they participated in competent projects in Los Angeles, one of the poorest and most criminally affected communities in the United States did. In addition, our rise is an exciting chronicle of these crucial youngsters when they are facing the greatest challenges in academic life. When Toya was fifth grader, Toyota's stepfather narrowed his mother. Olivia was a word in the county, when I was sixteen I lived in ten different foster families. As the gang grows up, Sadi saw his three brothers die and a lot of people go to jail. Such stories are part of the daily lives of talented students at Crenshaw High School.
Toya, Olivia, Sadi are only three of the twelve young people depicted in And Still We Rise. Miles Cowen, the writer of the reporter of "Killing Season" and "Los Angeles Times" spent a year in the same class with these children as having excellent IQ and standardized test scores. Talent Plan One day Corwin recorded their trip fighting for their own private war as they might go to college. When they studied William Shakespeare and James Joyce in the classroom, Cowen saw that the bullet passed through the window and sat next to them. But for these students, the natural landscape is not their only battlefield: they are in trouble with political interactions, and as the last high school senior to benefit from positive behavior, they are uncertain I will face a future. More importantly, they depend on most alternations between a motivating speech and the government's painful roar that she believes to be the enemy teacher.