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Driving in Cars with Homeless Men

Stories

ebook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available
<b>A Library Journal Best Book of 2019</b> <i> Driving in Cars with Homeless Men </i>is a love letter to women moving through violence. These linked stories are set in the streets and the bars, the old homes, the tiny apartments, and the landscape of a working-class Boston. Serena, Frankie, Raffa, and Nat collide and break apart like pool balls to come back together in an imagined post-divorce future. Through the gritty, unraveling truths of their lives, they find themselves in the bed of an overdosed lover, through the panting tongue of a rescue dog who is equally as dislanguaged as his owner, in the studio apartment of a compulsive liar, sitting backward but going forward in the galley of an airplane, in relationships that are at once playgrounds and cages. <i>Homeless Men </i>is the collective story of women whose lives careen back into the past, to the places where pain lurks and haunts. With riotous energy and rage, they run towards the future in the hopes of untangling themselves from failure to succeed and fail again.
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    • Library Journal

      September 27, 2019

      [DEBUT] This impressive first collection of short fiction from Wisel follows working-class Boston girls Serena, Frankie, Raffa, and Natalya through their turbulent childhoods and complicated young adult lives. Chapters ricochet between their vantage points and life stages, following the four as they navigate absent fathers and bad boyfriends, substance abuse and violence, leaving readers slightly off-balance--the better to convey the urgent and messy worlds through which they traverse. But Wisel, winner of Drue Heinz Literature Prize, never allows us to pity her protagonists, who are tenacious, loyal to one another, and intelligent; Frankie says, "I have to admit, fighting was exciting. It made me feel proactive, like I was using some kind of gym membership, rhetorical kickboxing." The women's fierce bonds, in particular, are wonderfully portrayed. Wisel's prose is strobelike, illuminating the gritty landscape with small, powerful details--of a pregnant women, "when her T-shirt rose the purple swell to her bellybutton looked like a black eye"; wedding guests who "dance like a bunch of Sims on coke." VERDICT This dynamic--and often harrowing--collection beautifully spotlights lives that are rough around the edges; not standard fare but highly recommended.--Lisa Peet, Library Journal

      Copyright 2019 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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Languages

  • English

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