The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace: A Brilliant Young Man Who Left Newark for the Ivy League
By (Author) Jeff Hobbs
Simon & Schuster
Scribner
1st October 2014
United States
General
Non Fiction
974.9044092
Winner of L.A. Times Book Prize (Current Interest) 2014
Hardback
416
Width 152mm, Height 229mm, Spine 33mm
576g
A heartfelt, and riveting biography of the short life of a talented young African-American man who escapes the slums of Newark for Yale University only to succumb to the dangers of the streetsand of ones own naturewhen he returns home.
When author Jeff Hobbs arrived at Yale University, he became fast friends with the man who would be his college roommate for four years, Robert Peace. Roberts life was rough from the beginning in the crime-ridden streets of Newark in the 1980s, with his father in jail and his mother earning less than $15,000 a year. But Robert was a brilliant student, and it was supposed to get easier when he was accepted to Yale, where he studied molecular biochemistry and biophysics. But it didnt get easier. Robert carried with him the difficult dual nature of his existence, fronting in Yale, and at home.
Through an honest rendering of Roberts relationshipswith his struggling mother, with his incarcerated father, with his teachers and friends and fellow drug dealersThe Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace encompasses the most enduring conflicts in America: race, class, drugs, community, imprisonment, education, family, friendship, and love. Its about the collision of two fiercely insular worldsthe ivy-covered campus of Yale University and Newark, New Jersey, and the difficulty of going from one to the other and then back again. Its about poverty, the challenges of single motherhood, and the struggle to find male role models in a community where a man is more likely to go to prison than to college. Its about reaching ones greatest potential and taking responsibility for your family no matter the cost. Its about trying to live a decent life in America. But most all the story is about the tragic life of one singular brilliant young man. His end, a violent one, is heartbreaking and powerful and unforgettable.
Mesmeric... [Hobbs] asks the consummate American question: Is it possible to reinvent yourself, to sculpture your own destiny... That one man can contain such contradictions makes for an astonishing, tragic story. In Hobbss hands, though, it becomes something more: an interrogation of our national creed of self-invention.... [The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace] deserves a turn in the nations pulpit from which it can beg us to see the third world America in our midst. * The New York Times Book Review *
"Many institutions that provide bridges to realization of The American Dream conflate the aspirants yearning to participate fully with a desire to leave everything behind. The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace reveals the devastating consequences of this assumption. There are few road maps for students who carry our much-valued diversity, and few tools for those who remain ignorant of the diverse riches in their midst. Jeff Hobbs has made an important contribution to the literature for all of us. He shows what high quality journalism can aspire to in its own yearning for justicethe urgency of taking a full and accurate account of irreplaceable loss, so we dont keep making the same mistakes over and over again." -- Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, author of Random Family
"A haunting work of nonfiction.... Mr. Hobbs writes in a forthright but not florid way about a heartbreaking story. * The New York Times *
"I can hardly think of a book that feels more necessary, relevant, and urgent." * Grantland *
"The Short Tragic Life of Robert Peace is a book that is as much about class as it is race. Peace traveled across Americas widening social divide, and Hobbs book is an honest, insightful and empathetic account of his sometimes painful, always strange journey." * The Los Angeles Times *
"Devastating. It is a testament to Hobbss talents that Peaces murder still shocks and stings even though we are clued into his fate from the outset....a first-rate book. [Hobbs] has a tremendous ability to empathize with all of his characters without romanticizing any of them." * Boston Globe *
"It is hard to imagine a writer with no personal connection to Peace being able to generate as much emotional traction in this narrative as Hobbs does, to care as much about portraying fully the depth and intricacy of Peaces life, his friends and the context of it all... it is an enormous writing feat.. fresh, compelling." * The Washington Post *
"[An] intimate biography... Hobbs uses [Peace's] journey as an opportunity to discuss race and class, but he doesnt let such issues crowd out a sense of his friends individuality...By the end, the reader, like the author, desperately wishes that Peace could have had more time." * The New Yorker *
Heartbreaking. * O Magazine *
"Captivating... a smart meditation on the false promise of social mobility." * Bloomsberg BusinessWeek *
"Nuanced and shattering. * People magazine, "Best Books of Fall" *
"The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace is a powerful book meant to haunt us with the question that plagued everyone who knew Peace. Hobbs has the courage not to counterfeit an answer leaving us with the haunting question: Why" * The New York Daily News *
"The Short and Tragic Life [of Robert Peace] tackles some important topics: the swamp of poverty; the tantalizing hope of education; the question of whether anyone can truly invent a life or whether fate is, in fact, dictated by birth...[Its] account of worlds colliding will leave nagging questions for many readers which might be all to the good." * The Seattle Times *
"A haunting American tragedy for our times." * Entertainment Weekly *
"Can a man transcend the circumstances into which hes born Can he embody two wildly divergent souls To what degree are all of us, more or less, slaves to our environments Few lives put such questions into starker relief than that of one Robert DeShaun Peace... As Hobbs reveals in tremendously moving and painstaking detail, [Peace] may have never had a chance." * San Francisco Chronicle *
"Mr. Hobbs chronicles Peaces brief 30 years on earth with descriptive detail and penetrating prose...
He paints a picture of a young man who was complex, like most of us, and depicted both his faults and admirable qualities equally. It is up to the reader to decide if Peace was an Ivy League grad caught up in a life of crime or just a victim of circumstances... Mr. Hobbs empathetic narrative gives readers an opportunity to view his life beyond a stereotype." * Pittsburgh Post-Gazette *
"With novelistic detail and deep insight, Hobbs... registers the disadvantages his friend faced while avoiding hackneyed fatalism and sociology... reveals a man whose singular experience and charisma made him simultaneously an outsider and a leader in both New Hampshire and Newark... This is a classic tragedy of a man who, with the best intentions, chooses an ineluctable path to disaster." * Publishers Weekly, STARRED review *
"Ambitious, moving...Hobbs combines memoir, sociological analysis and urban narrative elements, producing a perceptive page-turner... An urgent report on the state of American aspirations and a haunting dispatch from forsaken streets." * Kirkus, STARRED review *
"Peace navigated the clashing cultures of urban poverty and Ivy League privilege, never quite finding a place where his particular brand of nerdiness and cool could coexist... [Hobbs] set out to offer a full picture of a very complicated individual. Writing with the intimacy of a close friend, Hobbs slowly reveals Peace as far more than a clich of amazing potential squandered." * Booklist, STARRED review *
"One part biography and one part study of poverty in the United States, Hobbs's account of his friend's life and death highlights how our pasts shape us, and how our eternal search for a place of safety and belonging can prove to be dangerous. Peace's life was indeed short and tragic, but Hobbs aims to guarantee that it will not go unmarked." * Shelf Awareness, STARRED review *
"The resulting portrait of Peace is nuance, contradictory, elusive, and probing... At its core, the story compels readers to question how much one can really know about another person... VERDICT: An intelligent, provocative book, recommended for any biography lover." * Library Journal *
If The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace were a novel, it would be a moral fable for our times; as nonfiction, it is one of the saddest and most devastating books Ive ever read, a tour-de-force of compassion and insight, an exquisite elegy for a person, for a time of life, for a valid hope that nonetheless failed. It is also a profound reflection on a society that professes to value social mobility, but that often does not or cannot imbue privilege with justice. It is written with clarity, precision, and tenderness, without judgment, with immense kindness, and with a quiet poetry. Few books transform us, but this one has changed me forever. -- Andrew Solomon, author of Far From the Tree and Noonday Demon
Jeff Hobbs has written a mesmerizingly beautiful book, a mournful, yet joyous celebration of his friend Robert Peace, this full-throated, loving, complicated man whose journey feels simultaneously heroic and tragic. This book is an absolute triumphof empathy and of storytelling. Hobbs has accomplished something extraordinary: hes made me feel like Peace was a part of my life, as well. Trust me on this, Peace is someone you need to get to know. Hell leave you smiling. His story will leave you shaken. -- Alex Kotlowitz, author of There Are No Children Here: The Story of Two Boys Growing Up in the Other America
A poignant and powerful cant-put-it-down book about friendship and loss. The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace takes you on a nail-biting, heartbreaking journey that will leave you moved, shaken, and ultimately changed. In this spectacularly written first work of non-fiction, Jeff Hobbs creates a singular and searing portrait of an unforgettable life. -- Jennifer Gonnerman, author of Life on the Outside: The Prison Odyssey of Elaine Bartlett
"Many institutions that provide bridges to realization of The American Dream conflate the aspirants yearning to participate fully with a desire to leave everything behind. The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace reveals the devastating consequences of this assumption. There are few road maps for students who carry our much-valued diversity, and few tools for those who remain ignorant of the diverse riches in their midst. Jeff Hobbs has made an important contribution to the literature for all of us. He shows what high quality journalism can aspire to in its own yearning for justicethe urgency of taking a full and accurate account of irreplaceable loss, so we dont keep making the same mistakes over and over again." -- Adrian Nicole LeBlanc, author of Random Family
Jeff Hobbs is the author of The Short and Tragic Life of Robert Peace, which won the Los Angeles Times Book Prize and was made into the 2024 film Rob Peace. He is also the author of Show Them Youre Good and Children of the State. He lives in Los Angeles with his wife and two children.