Back to blood: a novel

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English
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A big, panoramic story of the new America, as told by our master chronicler of the way we live now. As a police launch speeds across Miami's Biscayne Bay -- with officer Nestor Camacho on board -- Tom Wolfe is off and running. Into the feverous landscape of the city, he introduces the Cuban mayor, the black police chief, a wanna-go-muckraking young journalist and his Yale-marinated editor; an Anglo sex-addiction psychiatrist and his Latina nurse by day, loin lock by night-until lately, the love of Nestor's life; a refined, and oh-so-light-skinned young woman from Haiti and her Creole-spouting, black-gang-banger-stylin' little brother; a billionaire porn addict, crack dealers in the 'hoods, "de-skilled" conceptual artists at the Miami Art Basel Fair, "spectators" at the annual Biscayne Bay regatta looking only for that night's orgy, yenta-heavy ex-New Yorkers at an "Active Adult" condo, and a nest of shady Russians. Based on the same sort of detailed, on-scene, high-energy reporting that powered Tom Wolfe's previous bestselling novels, Back to Blood is another brilliant, spot-on, scrupulous, and often hilarious reckoning with our times.

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ISBN
9780316036313
9780316214582
9781619691735
9780316036337
9780316214599
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Table of Contents

From the Book - 1st ed.

We een Mee-AH-Mee Now [We in Miami now]
The man on the mast
The hero's welcome
The daring weak man
Magdalena
The pissing monkey
Skin
The mattress
The Columbus Day Regatta
South Beach outreach
The super bowl of the art world
Ghislaine
Jujitsu justice
A la moda Cubana
Girls with green tails
The yentas
Humiliation one
Humiliation, too
Na Zdrovia!
the whore
The witness
The knight of Hialeah.

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Similar Titles From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for titles you might like if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
These books have the appeal factors offbeat, sardonic, and witty, and they have the theme "urban police"; the genres "satire and parodies" and "police procedurals"; and the subjects "police," "city life," and "detectives."
These books have the subjects "city life" and "city dwellers."
These books have the appeal factors offbeat, sardonic, and witty, and they have the subjects "sex addiction" and "city life."
These books have the appeal factors offbeat, sardonic, and fast-paced, and they have the genre "satire and parodies"; and the subjects "city life" and "gentrification of cities."
These books have the subjects "journalists," "ambition," and "celebrities."
These books have the appeal factors offbeat and sardonic, and they have the subjects "artists" and "art."
Prospect Park West - Sohn, Amy
Though Prospect Park takes place in Brooklyn and Back to Blood occurs in Miami, both novels feature a variety of quirky characters against a backdrop of big city life; dark humor, satire, and sticky situations add up to entertaining romps. -- Katherine Johnson
These books have the appeal factors suspenseful and fast-paced, and they have the subjects "police," "journalists," and "sex addiction."
These books have the appeal factors offbeat and sardonic, and they have the genres "satire and parodies" and "political fiction."
A decent ride - Welsh, Irvine
These books have the appeal factors offbeat, sardonic, and darkly humorous.
These books have the appeal factors offbeat, sardonic, and cinematic, and they have the subjects "journalists," "ambition," and "women journalists."
Darkly humorous, these novels satirize society and human nature. While Back to Blood relies on stereotyped characters, The City of Devi references Hindu stories and characters in its apocalyptic plot. Both contain explicit sex, though Back to Blood includes more. -- Lauren Havens

Similar Authors From NoveList

NoveList provides detailed suggestions for other authors you might want to read if you enjoyed this book. Suggestions are based on recommendations from librarians and other contributors.
While T. Coraghessan Boyle sticks to fiction and Tom Wolfe writes fiction and nonfiction, both authors offer entertaining yet incisive views of the flaws in American culture and society. They skillfully manipulate words and concepts to illumine quirks while sympathetically portraying their characters. -- Katherine Johnson
Norman Mailer and Tom Wolfe are iconic figures in the "New Journalism" movement, and their nonfiction accounts of important historical events and people share the same compelling narratives, elegant prose, and thoughtful reflections found in their fiction. Despite diverse subjects, all their works contain strong authorial voices and provocative opinions. -- Derek Keyser
Similarities between these novelists are no coincidence: Tom Wolfe idolized Emile Zola. Wolfe's well-researched social satires, intended as comprehensive portraits of his era, continue the tradition of Zola, who extensively documented his novels about late 19th-century France, enriching them with gritty detail and a strong sense of place. -- Michael Shumate
Both skewer the foibles of the rich and famous during the so-called "American Century" (the 20th century). While Wolfe's works are melancholic and sobering and Dunne generally adopts a breezier conversational style, they are both able to dish the dirt in a gossipy tone. -- Autumn Winters
The similarities between Tom Wolfe and Jonathan Lethem appear mainly in their exuberant, skillful writing style and their fearlessness in addressing unusual topics. Thematically speaking, Wolfe more directly critiques American foibles, while Lethem explores American preoccupations more subtly. -- Katherine Johnson
These authors' works have the appeal factors sardonic and irreverent, and they have the genre "satire and parodies"; and the subjects "race relations," "social status," and "rich people."
These authors' works have the appeal factors irreverent, and they have the genre "satire and parodies"; and the subjects "rape," "social status," and "rich people."
These authors' works have the appeal factors sardonic, irreverent, and darkly humorous, and they have the genre "satire and parodies"; and the subjects "real estate developers," "social status," and "social classes."
These authors' works have the appeal factors sardonic and irreverent, and they have the genre "satire and parodies"; and the subjects "social status," "rich people," and "upper class."
These authors' works have the appeal factors cinematic, stylistically complex, and unconventional, and they have the subjects "race relations" and "racism"; and characters that are "complex characters."
These authors' works have the appeal factors sardonic and irreverent, and they have the subjects "rape," "social status," and "women college students."
These authors' works have the appeal factors offbeat, sardonic, and stylistically complex, and they have the genres "satire and parodies" and "page to screen"; and the subjects "rich people" and "social life and customs."

Published Reviews

Booklist Review

*Starred Review* After skewering academia in I Am Charlotte Simmons (2004), Wolfe, the impish, white-suited satirist, eviscerates a city-in-flux as he did with New York in The Bonfire of the Vanities (1987) and Atlanta in A Man in Full (1998). This time he takes on Miami, which, as one character declares, is not America. Wolfe's pizzazz and obsessions are on peacock display, from slapstick action to ironic stereotypes to photorealist settings, including smugly trendy restaurants, a gated island, the bawdy Biscayne Bay regatta, and the prestigious annual exhibition, Art Basel Miami. The king and queen in his chess-set cast of characters are two young Cuban Americans determined to ascend above the modest homes and rigid mindsets of their Little Havana neighborhood. Freakishly muscular Nestor is a sweet-natured cop who earns combustible notoriety when he daringly rescues an illegal Cuban immigrant from atop a ship's mast. Beautiful Magdalena is a nurse working for an Anglo psychiatrist who treats wealthy patients addicted to pornography. Also on the board are a sly, Waspy reporter; a suspect Russian art collector; and a lovely Haitian college student. Within a masterfully strategized plot, Wolfe works his sardonic mojo to mock both prejudice and decadence and demolish the art world, reality TV, tawdry fame, and journalism in the digital age. Though plagued with belabored sex scenes, this is a shrewd, riling, and exciting tale of a volatile, divisive, sun-seared city where everybody hates everybody. HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Anticipation has been high for several years now, so the publisher will crank up the publicity for what can legitimately be dubbed a cultural event.--Seaman, Donna Copyright 2010 Booklist

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
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Publisher's Weekly Review

Two hundred pages into Wolfe's frantic potboiler about Miami's melting pot, a description of City Hall reminds readers of the vivid detail that made Wolfe (The Bonfire of the Vanities) a literary icon. Yet despite flashes of "the right stuff", his latest novel comprises not an expose of popular culture so much as a lurid compendium of cliches. The prologue features a scandal-fearing newspaper editor fretting as his wife tries to park her mini-hybrid at a trendy restaurant, but the action begins with marine patrolman Nestor Camacho speeding across Biscayne Bay. Unfortunately, his moment of glory dissolves into humiliation when he is condemned for arresting, after saving, a Cuban refugee. Resolute in pressing on, a bewildered Nestor works with reporter John Smith to unravel fraud at the city's new art museum and uncover the truth behind an incident of school violence. In the process, he meets elegant Haitian beauty Ghislaine, whose professor father desperately hopes she'll "pass" for white. African Americans, Russian emigres, and Jewish retirees also appear: ethnic groups separated by language, tribe, and class; linked together by sex, money, and real estate. Filling his prose with sound effects, foreign phrases, accented English, and slang, Wolfe creates his own Miami sound machine-noisy, chaotic, infused with tropical rhythms, and fueled by the American dream. The result is a book louder than it is deep; more sensational than it is thought provoking; less like Wolfe at his best, more like tabloid headlines recast as fiction. (Oct. 23) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.

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Kirkus Book Review

Wolfe (A Man in Full, 1998, etc.) returns to fine form with this zingy, mile-a-minute novel of life in the weird confines of Miami. As if the 45 years from Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test to here hadn't passed, Wolfe is back to some old tricks, including an ever-shifting, sometimes untrustworthy point of view, dizzying pans from one actor to another and rat-a-tat prose. Some of his post-yuppie characters might have been extras from Bonfire of the Vanities, while the hero of the piece has the endless self-regard of Gordo Cooper in The Right Stuff--but no matter where they figure on the social ladder or tax bracketing scheme, they're mystified by one another. The tale opens with Mac the Knife, a 40-something fleshpot behind the wheel of a hybrid car who, scarcely a dozen pages in, falls afoul of a tough Cubana: "Far from shrinking under Mac's attack, the beautiful rude bitch came two steps closerand said, in English without raising her voice, Why you speet when you talk?' " Cuban and Anglo, Russian and Jew, rich and poor: All of Miami is a meeting place that very often turns into a battleground, over the carnage of which ranges Wolfe's nominal hero, a waterborne cop named Nestor Camacho, who has his work cut out for him. That's especially true when he tries to blend in with the beach bimbettes here and the retired New Yorkers there, and though he tries (for, as Wolfe astutely observes, "Walking nonchalantly in a crouch--it couldn't be done"), he always cuts a fine and heroic figure. Wolfe's book goes on long, but never too long, and though he often strays into ethnic-clash territory staked out by John Sayles, he makes Miami his own as a kind of laboratory of future possibilities, some dystopian and some not, all ripe for lampooning. Full of stereotyping and waspishness, sure, but a welcome pleasure from an old master and the best from his pen in a long while.]] Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
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Booklist Reviews

*Starred Review* After skewering academia in I Am Charlotte Simmons (2004), Wolfe, the impish, white-suited satirist, eviscerates a city-in-flux as he did with New York in The Bonfire of the Vanities (1987) and Atlanta in A Man in Full (1998). This time he takes on Miami, which, as one character declares, is not America. Wolfe's pizzazz and obsessions are on peacock display, from slapstick action to ironic stereotypes to photorealist settings, including smugly trendy restaurants, a gated island, the bawdy Biscayne Bay regatta, and the prestigious annual exhibition, Art Basel Miami. The king and queen in his chess-set cast of characters are two young Cuban Americans determined to ascend above the modest homes and rigid mindsets of their "Little Havana" neighborhood. Freakishly muscular Nestor is a sweet-natured cop who earns combustible notoriety when he daringly rescues an illegal Cuban immigrant from atop a ship's mast. Beautiful Magdalena is a nurse working for an Anglo psychiatrist who treats wealthy patients addicted to pornography. Also on the board are a sly, Waspy reporter; a suspect Russian art collector; and a lovely Haitian college student. Within a masterfully strategized plot, Wolfe works his sardonic mojo to mock both prejudice and decadence and demolish the art world, reality TV, tawdry fame, and journalism in the digital age. Though plagued with belabored sex scenes, this is a shrewd, riling, and exciting tale of a volatile, divisive, sun-seared city where "everybody hates everybody." HIGH-DEMAND BACKSTORY: Anticipation has been high for several years now, so the publisher will crank up the publicity for what can legitimately be dubbed a cultural event. Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2012 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

About every eight to ten years since the 1987 publication of Bonfire of the Vanities, Wolfe writes a novel summing up America's zeitgeist. This wide-lens view of Miami's Biscayne Bay sounds no different. Here we meet the Cuban mayor and black police chief, the ambitious young journalist (a Wolfe in character's clothing?), a light-skinned Creole from Haiti (whose darker brother preens like a gangster), the billionaire porn addict and the artists at the Miami Arts Basel Fair, the spectators at the regatta and the former New Yorkers at an "Active Adult" condo—not to mention some suspicious-looking Russians. What are they up to? You must read this book to find out.

[Page 56]. (c) Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.

Copyright 2012. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

Two hundred pages into Wolfe's frantic potboiler about Miami's melting pot, a description of City Hall reminds readers of the vivid detail that made Wolfe (The Bonfire of the Vanities) a literary icon. Yet despite flashes of "the right stuff", his latest novel comprises not an exposé of popular culture so much as a lurid compendium of clichés. The prologue features a scandal-fearing newspaper editor fretting as his wife tries to park her mini-hybrid at a trendy restaurant, but the action begins with marine patrolman Nestor Camacho speeding across Biscayne Bay. Unfortunately, his moment of glory dissolves into humiliation when he is condemned for arresting, after saving, a Cuban refugee. Resolute in pressing on, a bewildered Nestor works with reporter John Smith to unravel fraud at the city's new art museum and uncover the truth behind an incident of school violence. In the process, he meets elegant Haitian beauty Ghislaine, whose professor father desperately hopes she'll "pass" for white. African Americans, Russian émigrés, and Jewish retirees also appear: ethnic groups separated by language, tribe, and class; linked together by sex, money, and real estate. Filling his prose with sound effects, foreign phrases, accented English, and slang, Wolfe creates his own Miami sound machine—noisy, chaotic, infused with tropical rhythms, and fueled by the American dream. The result is a book louder than it is deep; more sensational than it is thought provoking; less like Wolfe at his best, more like tabloid headlines recast as fiction. (Oct. 23)

[Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC
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PW Annex Reviews

Two hundred pages into Wolfe's frantic potboiler about Miami's melting pot, a description of City Hall reminds readers of the vivid detail that made Wolfe (The Bonfire of the Vanities) a literary icon. Yet despite flashes of "the right stuff", his latest novel comprises not an exposé of popular culture so much as a lurid compendium of clichés. The prologue features a scandal-fearing newspaper editor fretting as his wife tries to park her mini-hybrid at a trendy restaurant, but the action begins with marine patrolman Nestor Camacho speeding across Biscayne Bay. Unfortunately, his moment of glory dissolves into humiliation when he is condemned for arresting, after saving, a Cuban refugee. Resolute in pressing on, a bewildered Nestor works with reporter John Smith to unravel fraud at the city's new art museum and uncover the truth behind an incident of school violence. In the process, he meets elegant Haitian beauty Ghislaine, whose professor father desperately hopes she'll "pass" for white. African Americans, Russian émigrés, and Jewish retirees also appear: ethnic groups separated by language, tribe, and class; linked together by sex, money, and real estate. Filling his prose with sound effects, foreign phrases, accented English, and slang, Wolfe creates his own Miami sound machine—noisy, chaotic, infused with tropical rhythms, and fueled by the American dream. The result is a book louder than it is deep; more sensational than it is thought provoking; less like Wolfe at his best, more like tabloid headlines recast as fiction. (Oct. 23)

[Page ]. Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC

Copyright 2012 PWxyz LLC
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