Error loading page.
Try refreshing the page. If that doesn't work, there may be a network issue, and you can use our self test page to see what's preventing the page from loading.
Learn more about possible network issues or contact support for more help.

I'll Take Everything You Have

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From an Edgar Award-winning author, this historical noir novel follows the life-changing summer of sixteen-year-old Joe Garbe as he discovers queer community in 1930s Chicago and gets caught up in the city's crooked underbelly.
 
In the summer of 1934, Joe Garbe arrives in Chicago with one goal: Earn enough money to get out of debt and save the family farm. Joe’s cousin sets him up with a hotel job, then proposes a sketchy scheme to make a lot more money fast. While running his con, Joe finds himself splitting time between Eddie, a handsome flirt on a delivery truck, and Raymond, a carefree rich kid who shows Joe the eye-opening queer life around every corner of the big city.
 
Joe’s exposure to the surface of criminal Chicago pulls him into something darker than he could have imagined. When danger closes in—from gangsters, the police, and people he thought were friends—Joe needs to pack up and get lost. But before he can figure out where to go, he has to decide who he wants to be.
 
I’ll Take Everything You Have is a vivid portrayal of queer coming of age in Depression-era Chicago, and a timeless story of trying to make your future bright when the rest of the world is dead set on keeping it hidden in the dark.
  • Creators

  • Publisher

  • Release date

  • Formats

  • Languages

  • Reviews

    • Publisher's Weekly

      December 12, 2022
      Klise (When Love Comes to Town) uniquely portrays 1934 Chicago through the eyes of queer 16-year-old Joe Garbe as he wrestles with moral ambiguity, palpable desperation, and a deep longing for queer love and community in this gritty noir novel. Joe plans to spend the summer in Chicago with his cousin Bernie working in the Lago Vista’s hotel kitchen and sending money back to his mother to help revive their crumbling Illinois country farm. He doesn’t expect to get involved in the city’s underground queer subculture or to become romantically entangled with two other young men seeking connection. But when Joe gets wrapped up in one of Bernie’s illicit money-making schemes, which dangerously intersects with Joe’s secret queer identity, the potential consequences endanger Joe’s desired future. Pulling from a wealth of research, as described in an author’s note, Klise details an arresting narrative replete with historical minutiae and slang (“Everything around us looked swell, marble walls and brass ticket counters”) to provide a mesmerizing snapshot of 1930s Chicago via a narrative that is atmospheric and economically told. Joe cues as white. Ages 13–17. Agent: Jennifer Laughran, Andrea Brown Literary.

    • Booklist

      January 1, 2023
      Grades 9-12 June 1934, Chicago's Lasalle Street railroad station. Enter 16-year-old Joe Garbe, fresh off the train from Kickapoo, Illinois. Joe's come to the big city to take a job his 19-year-old cousin Bernie has secured for him. It's the height of the Great Depression, and Joe's plan is to earn enough money to save the family farm and go to college. Anxious for more money, he agrees to participate in a nefarious scheme that leads him to meet wealthy Raymond, who--like Joe--is gay. The two boys secretly begin a relationship, which leads to something horrible that might result in Joe's going to prison. Will he, or will he escape to Kickapoo? Klise (The Art of Secrets, 2014) has done an excellent job of evoking his 1930s setting, which is enhanced by period diction: ""golly,"" ""a looker,"" ""glad rags,"" ""chow,"" etc. His story is engaging, and readers will root for innocent Joe and hope for a fate more agreeable than a return to closeted life down on the farm.

      COPYRIGHT(2023) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      May 1, 2023
      Intent on saving his family farm during the Great Depression, sixteen-year-old Joe arrives in Chicago to work and send money home. Thanks to the cousin he's staying with, he has two jobs lined up. One is working in the kitchen of a hotel. The other involves taking French classes at a local church; collecting his wealthy classmates' names, addresses, and travel dates; and passing the information along to criminals who plan to rob the homes while their occupants are vacationing abroad. Despite his reservations, Joe goes along with the scheme and is drawn inexorably into a web of lies, deceit, blackmail, and murder. With elements of noir, the plot is further complicated by a love triangle: Eddie makes deliveries to the hotel, Raymond is in his French class, and Joe becomes romantically involved with both. As trouble catches up to Joe, he's forced to flee Chicago, but he's reluctant to leave the queer community he's found and finds little solace in the idea of returning home. Klise deftly manages to balance a number of elements in Joe's first-person narration: his gradual transition from wide-eyed innocence toward criminal activity, the complicated motivations of secondary characters, convincing dialogue, and an aura of danger and suspense. The historical setting and secretly queer characters may appeal to fans of Lo's Last Night at the Telegraph Club (rev. 3/21). An author's note gives brief historical background and suggestions for further reading. Jonathan Hunt

      (Copyright 2023 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from November 15, 2022
      Sixteen-year-old Joe Garbe leaves the family farm, finding trouble and romance in Chicago during the Great Depression. Arriving by train, Joe meets his cousin, Bernie, at the station and is instantly enamored by the sights and sounds of the city. Thanks to Bernie, Joe lands a job in the kitchen of the Lago Vista hotel, where he now meets Eddie Zambriskie. Their chemistry is palpable from the start, and they start dating. Meanwhile, Joe's desperate need to settle his family's debts back home in Kickapoo gets him involved in an underhanded scheme: His role is to take a French conversation class with wealthy people who will be sailing to Europe on vacation and gather information about his classmates' names and travel dates so that Bernie's criminal confederates can burgle their homes while they're away. This ruse is complicated by Joe's love affair with Raymond Kenrick, one of his marks, who introduces him to kissing, so-called pansy parlors, and sex. The emotionally nuanced characters, most of whom are presumed White, navigate stages of guilt, paranoia, and remorse as they swindle as a means of survival--with tragically beautiful results. Through passionate, cinematic scenes, Klise poignantly captures the fears and joys of being gay in this polished work of historical fiction. A transportive, thrillingly queer adventure. (author's note) (Historical fiction. 14-18)

      COPYRIGHT(2022) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • The Horn Book

      January 1, 2023
      Intent on saving his family farm during the Great Depression, sixteen-year-old Joe arrives in Chicago to work and send money home. Thanks to the cousin he's staying with, he has two jobs lined up. One is working in the kitchen of a hotel. The other involves taking French classes at a local church; collecting his wealthy classmates' names, addresses, and travel dates; and passing the information along to criminals who plan to rob the homes while their occupants are vacationing abroad. Despite his reservations, Joe goes along with the scheme and is drawn inexorably into a web of lies, deceit, blackmail, and murder. With elements of noir, the plot is further complicated by a love triangle: Eddie makes deliveries to the hotel, Raymond is in his French class, and Joe becomes romantically involved with both. As trouble catches up to Joe, he's forced to flee Chicago, but he's reluctant to leave the queer community he's found and finds little solace in the idea of returning home. Klise deftly manages to balance a number of elements in Joe's first-person narration: his gradual transition from wide-eyed innocence toward criminal activity, the complicated motivations of secondary characters, convincing dialogue, and an aura of danger and suspense. The historical setting and secretly queer characters may appeal to fans of Lo's Last Night at the Telegraph Club (rev. 3/21). An author's note gives brief historical background and suggestions for further reading.

      (Copyright 2023 by The Horn Book, Incorporated, Boston. All rights reserved.)

Formats

  • Kindle Book
  • OverDrive Read
  • EPUB ebook

Languages

  • English

Loading