Tuesday, September 4, 2012

The Bookie's Son by Andrew Goldstein

The Bookie's Son by Andrew Goldstein
Published May 2012 by (sixoneseven) books
Source: the author and TLC Book Tours in exchange for this review

In the Bronx of 1960, life is tough for 12-year-old Ricky Davis. He can't remember his Hebrew lessons with his Bar Mitzvah bearing down on him, his mother is so unhappy that she is rarely at home, and his father is forever chasing a dream that never seems to come true. Now his latest dream gone bust has gotten him into serious trouble with a local mobster who wants his money...now.

While his father is at working as a cutter in the garment district and his mother as a secretary to a big-time promoter, Ricky is left in charge of his father's bookie business. Ricky would love to be out playing with the other kids but if he leaves the apartment, his crazy grandmother is liable to take a bet, something that is bound to cause problems for Ricky. Harry Davis is a man with a mean temper and living on the edge is making him even worse. Ricky spends much of his free time trying to figure out ways to get his father out of trouble. If only they can pay off their debt to Nathan Gluckman, Ricky hopes things will finally be better and his mother can finally be happy with the way her life has turned out. A bake sale, an attempt to convince his "girlfriend" to dance for the neighbor's for money, even an attempt to place a bet on a fixed race - Ricky is as busy trying to make a quick buck as his dad.

In his debut novel, Goldstein has done an incredible job of making the Bronx come alive, surrounding Ricky with a neighborhood full of real characters, a family of complete nuts (his grandmother is an extortionist, his mother concocts a plan to steal from Elizabeth Taylor), and descriptions of life on the Davis' street that gave me the feeling of a time and place that no longer exists. Despite all of their flaws, family and friends demonstrate loyalty and love that endear them to the reader. Goldstein manages, for the most part, to avoid the pitfalls of many first-time authors (repetition, an excess of adjectives, too many story lines), crafting a story based on his own real-life experiences that is clean and believable.

This is a book I knew nothing about, a book I took a chance on, the kind of book that makes me happy that I'm willing to reach out of my usual genres and to give new authors a chance. SixOneSeven is a micropress, where authors must take on more responsibility for their books than they might have with a larger publisher. Occasionally, this was obvious and distracted from my reading - the cartoon drawings at the start of each chapter, for example. Overall, though, I was impressed with this debut. Goldstein has mentioned that this is a book he's been writing for forty years. One can only hope that it won't take him that long to pen his next novel.

Thanks to TLC Book Tours for including me in this tour. For other thoughts on this book, check out the full tour.



8 comments:

  1. Oh, so glad you loved this one! I will be reading it very soon, and I am glad to hear that it's such a great read! Very nice post today! I have never read anything about the Bronx in that time period, so this should be fun!

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    1. Please let me know what you think. ag@andrewgoldsteinbooks.com I am just learning this system so if you already received a reply from me please ignore. Actually it would be helpful if you let me know you received this, so I can find out if I know what I'm doing. thanks, andrew

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  2. And I thank you for stepping outside your usual genres. I passed on this one because I just didn't think I would care for it. Now I am totally rethinking my decision!!

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  3. I love when debut authors deliver. I love vivid story-telling and this looks like one I'd pick up!

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  4. Thank you so much for the kind words-glad you enjoyed it.

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  5. Kudos for taking a chance on a book and a new author. I liked this book as well (http://manoflabook.com/wp/?p=6381) but unlike you I had an inkling that this book was up my alley.

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  6. My mom grew up in Brooklyn in the 1950s-1960s and this book reminds me of a lot of the stories she's told me over the years.

    Glad you enjoyed this one! Thanks for being on the tour. I'm featuring your review on TLC's Facebook page today.

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  7. I passed on this one, but really need to reconsider. I think it sounds so interesting. Great review

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