Lush Life by Richard Price reads exactly as you’d expect from someone who has written for HBO’s The Wire. The strength of this book rests in the characters that are given to the reader. A wealthy restaurateur who may or may not be connected with the wrong people, a young bar-tender who happens to be in the wrong place at the wrong time, inner city youth who lack options, a grieving father; all of these characters who live in our world, the world outside of fiction and that as I’ve said is the strength, real characters that just happen to be placed in a world of fiction.
By the time Eric made it around to the front of the store again, Fenton Ma had been spelled by an older cop, his shield reading LO PRESTO.
“Can I ask you something?” Eric said lightly, not knowing this guy. “Have you seen her in there?”
“Who, the Virgin?” Lo Presto looked at him neutrally. “Depends what you mean by ’seen’.”
“Well, I’ll tell you.” He looked off, palming his chest pocket for a cigarette. “About eight this morning? A couple of guys from the Ninth Squad went in there, you know, curious? And kneeling right in front of that thing is Servisio Tucker, had killed his wife up on Avenue D maybe six months ago. Now, these guys had been turning that neighborhood upside down looking for him ever since, right? And this morning alls they did was waltz on in there and there he was, on his knees. He looks right up at them, tears in his eyes, puts out his hands for cuffs, and says, ‘OK. Good. I’m ready’.”
“Huh.” Lo Presto finally fired up, exhaled luxuriously. “Did I see her? Who’s to say. But if what I just told you isn’t a fucking miracle, I don’t know what is.”
The city of New York comes alive with Price and if you have not had the joy of watching The Wire and are worried about getting involved in a long show with many seasons you cannot afford, then at the very least pick up this novel and give yourself a treat. Price allows you to get frustrated along with the detectives that have been assigned to the case in question. The politics and bureaucracy of the police and their worries of how crime is perceived by the larger public, these are all issues that Price lays bare for the reader. The novel is quick and fast paced (455 pgs) and I was tempted to quit half way through, not out of any lack of interest but because Price frustrates you as a reader. It is hard not to get involved with the characters and become upset at the walls that keep on popping up as the detectives struggle to figure out the crime. That is what Price is wanting to happen though, for you as a reader to become involved and annoyed at how frustrating it is to solve the crime, to put every little piece together in order to lay out a proper case for the district attorney.
Check it out, and in case my recommendation is not good enough. [ As if! ]. This book is number 3 on The 2009 Believer Book Award Reader Survey.
READER SURVEY RESULTS
- 2666—Roberto Bolaño
- Unlucky Lucky Days—Daniel Grandbois
- Lush Life—Richard Price
- The Lazarus Project—Aleksandar Hemon
- Netherland—Joseph O’Neill
- Vacation—Deb Olin Unferth
- Unaccustomed Earth—Jhumpa Lahiri
- Arkansas—John Brandon
- A Mercy—Toni Morrison
- Indignation—Philip Roth
- Death with Interruptions—José Saramago
- The Story of Edgar Sawtelle—David Wroblewski
- Bottomless Belly Button—Dash Shaw
- A Heaven of Others—Joshua Cohen
- So Brave, Young, and Handsome—Leif Enger
- How the Dead Dream—Lydia Millet
- Personal Days—Ed Park
- A Fraction of the Whole—Steve Toltz
- The Drop Edge of Yonder—Rudolph Wurlitzer
- Ghosts of Chicago—John McNally
Enjoy.
Next up on the chopping block: The Years by Virginia Woolf
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