Saint John of the Five Boroughs
By (Author) Ed Falco
Unbridled Books
Unbridled Books
20th October 2009
United States
General
Fiction
FIC
Paperback
432
Width 152mm, Height 228mm
595g
When 22-year-old Avery Walker, a senior at Penn State, meets Grant Danko, a 37-year-old performance artist from Brooklyn whose stage name is Saint John of the Five Boroughs, her life changes radically as she leaves college to live with Grant in Brooklyn and pursue a life as an artist. Worried about Avery, her mother, Kate, and her aunt, Lindsey, and Lindseys husband, Hank, travel to Brooklyn, where they all face a crisis of their own and make life-altering choices.
Grant is an angry guy with a curiously attractive personality and a coterie of bright, artistic friends. Hes used his good looks and his accomplishments, and the accomplishments of those friends, to get by while he works hauling stolen goods for his gangster uncle. He carries dark secrets that have caused his life to go off the rails. Grant is about as lost as a man can get, adept at making wrong choices. But when he finally faces his explosive moment of truth, something extraordinary happens.
Saint John of the Five Boroughs is beautifully turneda stunning and layered novel about the effects of violence, both personal and cultural, on its characters lives. Its about the way violence twists character, but also about the possibilities for redemption and change, for achieving a kind of personal grace. Edward Falco once again proves to be a master of urgency and suspense, of events careening out of control, as he brilliantly explores why we make the choices we makeboth the ones that threaten to destroy our lives, and those choices that might save us.
"Highly recommended. It is one book that readers can enjoy again and again over the years."--San Francisco Book Review "Falco has written a well-crafted book...The plot flows seamlessly...an accurate and readable record of life in his time...this book makes a comfortable companion." --The Roanoke Times "Falco's latest examines the underbelly of love and relationships, but he also populates the story with a cast of diverse and unusual characters. As the plot twists and turns, readers don't know what to expect next..."--Booklist "Falco here goes for a heft and complexity new to him, a saga of a family ruptured and an artist discovering herself, in which far-flung elements knit together skillfully, movingly -- and not a little frighteningly. As always in Falco, the drama is dominated by its women, seen frankly yet with empathy. Early missteps all but hobble the women here, younger and older. But this winning accomplishment, a new benchmark for its author, reminds us that few things can be so beautiful as a scar."--John Domini on Emerging Writers' Network "Falco produces some excellent writing, especially when he's exploring Grant's complicated past."--Publishers Weekly c "With sensitivity and passion, Falco dissects the effects of violence, both personal and cultural, on his characters' lives and does so in a novel that transcends the suspense genre."--Richmond Times Dispatch "An enjoyable read, a rich and redolent work that recaptures an evocative experience of simply settling down and getting lost in a good book."--Blogcritics.org