If I Ever Get out of Here by Eric Gansworth
Lewis, a member of the Tuscarora Indian Reservation in upstate NY, tries to hide his home from his new best friend, George Haddonfield, who has moved to town with the air force. While they share a love for music, especially for the Beatles, Lewis can not fully share who he is and where he comes from with a white boy from the "good" side of town. Circumstances break down this self-imposed barrier, and both boys benefit from racial boundaries falling away.
Review from School Library Journal:
In 1970s upstate New York, Lewis Blake inhabits two separate universes: the reservation where he lives in poverty with his mother and uncle, and school, where the fact that he is American Indian (and his sardonic sense of humor) has made him an outcast and a victim of bullying. The seventh grader has begun to accept his status until a new kid shows up in his class. George Haddonfield grew up on air force bases around the world and doesn't seem to know or care about the divisions between the reservation kids and everyone else. Although Lewis and George bond over their shared love of the Beatles, George's friendly overtures to visit are constantly rebuffed by Lewis, who isn't sure if their tentative friendship will be able to withstand the jarring differences between George's home and his own. Can a love of rock and roll overcome all? Lewis's relationships with his mother, his uncle, and even his peers ring true and draw readers deep into his world. Life on the reservation is so vividly depicted that scenes set elsewhere, such as the air force base where George lives, feel a little flatly drawn in comparison. Nonetheless, the overall tenor and wry humor of this novel more than make up for its weaknesses.