City of Margins
A Novel
by William Boyle
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Pub Date Mar 03 2020 | Archive Date Feb 29 2020
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Description
A vivid new cast of characters collide in gritty 1990s Brooklyn, in this latest from acclaimed neo-noir author William Boyle.
In City of Margins, the lives of several lost souls intersect in Southern Brooklyn in the early 1990s. There’s Donnie Parascandolo, a disgraced ex-cop with blood on his hands; Ava Bifulco, a widow whose daily work grind is her whole life; Nick, Ava’s son, a grubby high school teacher who dreams of a shortcut to success; Mikey Baldini, a college dropout who’s returned to the old neighborhood, purposeless and drifting; Donna Rotante, Donnie’s ex-wife, still reeling from the suicide of their teenage son; Mikey’s mother, Rosemarie, also a widow, who hopes Mikey won’t fall into the trap of strong arm work; and Antonina Divino, a high school girl with designs on breaking free from Brooklyn. Uniting them are the dead: Mikey’s old man, killed over a gambling debt, and Donnie and Donna’s poor son, Gabe.
These characters cross paths in unexpected ways, guided by coincidence and the pull of blood. There are new things to be found in the rubble of their lives, too. The promise of something different beyond the barriers that have been set out for them. This is a story of revenge and retribution, of facing down the ghosts of the past, of untold desires, of yearning and forgiveness and synchronicity, of the great distance of lives lived in dangerous proximity to each other. City of Margins is a Technicolor noir melodrama pieced together in broken glass.
About the Author: William Boyle is from Brooklyn, New York. His books include: Gravesend, which was nominated for the Grand Prix de Littérature Policiere in France and shortlisted for the John Creasey (New Blood) Dagger in the UK; The Lonely Witness, which is nominated for the Hammett Prize; and, most recently, A Friend Is a Gift You Give Yourself. He lives in Oxford, Mississippi.
Advance Praise
“A Jacobean revenge tangle in a Brooklyn where all the players have survived the same nuns. Even the most desperately lost of William Boyle's characters retain a hungry heart.” - John Sayles, writer/director of Matewan, Lone Star, and City of Hope, and author of Yellow Earth, A Moment in the Sun, and Union Dues
Available Editions
EDITION | Hardcover |
ISBN | 9781643133188 |
PRICE | $25.95 (USD) |
PAGES | 320 |
Featured Reviews
From the first page of City of Margins, you know you've found something special. Well, to be honest, you've struck a huge vein of gold. Boyle offers us a gritty Brooklyn crime fiction set in the nineties but somehow echoing books and movies set in earlier eras.
You've got the dirty corrupt cops, including one so twisted they kicked him off the force, Donnie. And Donnie, like any great Noir character, has only just begun to travel through the circles of hell. His marriage didn't survive his teenage son's suicide and he's little more than a mean-spirited enforcer for a loan shark, even prone to throwing the marks off bridges. His ex-wife Donna is practically a shut-in with her stacks of record albums. You got the family torn apart by the father's apparent suicide off a bridge and a family debt to a loan shark that won't go away. Mikey's going nowhere fast, but he's somehow linked up with Donnie and Donna too. Meanwhile, Donnie plays Good Samaritan to Ava whose loser son is planning to write a novel or movie treatment about neighborhood character Donnie.
All these people stuck in dead end lives going nowhere, never leaving their neighborhood and all linked by strange connections. It's a soap opera, gritty Noir style and every page is worth devouring. Well-paced, well-written. Done right.