Brooklyn Crime Novel: A Novel
(Libby/OverDrive eBook, Kindle)

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Published
HarperCollins , 2023.
Status
Available from Libby/OverDrive

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Description

Named a Best Book of the Year by: Boston Globe * New Yorker * NPR * PopMatters

From the bestselling and award-winning author of The Fortress of Solitude and Motherless Brooklyn comes a sweeping story of community, crime, and gentrification, tracing more than fifty years of life in one Brooklyn neighborhood.

“A blistering book. A love story. Social commentary. History. Protest novel. And mystery joins the whole together: is the crime 'time'? Or the almighty dollar? I got a great laugh from it too. Every city deserves a book like this.” — Colum McCann, author of Apeirogon and Let the Great World Spin

On the streets of 1970s Brooklyn, a daily ritual goes down: the dance. Money is exchanged, belongings surrendered, power asserted. The promise of violence lies everywhere, a currency itself. For these children, Black, brown, and white, the street is a stage in shadow. And in the wings hide the other players: parents; cops; renovators; landlords; those who write the headlines, the histories, and the laws; those who award this neighborhood its name.

The rules appear obvious at first. But in memory’s prism, criminals and victims may seem to trade places. The voices of the past may seem to rise and gather as if in harmony, then make war with one another. A street may seem to crack open and reveal what lies behind its glimmering facade. None who lived through it are ever permitted to forget.

Written with kaleidoscopic verve and delirious wit, Brooklyn Crime Novel is a breathtaking tour de force by a writer at the top of his powers. Jonathan Lethem, “one of America’s greatest storytellers” (Washington Post), has crafted an epic interrogation of how we fashion stories to contain the uncontainable: our remorse at the world we’ve made.

More Details

Format
eBook
Street Date
10/03/2023
Language
English
ISBN
9780062938831

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Similar Titles From NoveList

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These books have the appeal factors character-driven, strong sense of place, and sweeping, and they have the genre "literary fiction"; and the subjects "gentrification of cities," "neighborhoods," and "city life."
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Readers who want hardboiled fiction with literary flair, an epic scope, and a strong sense of place will appreciate these character-driven novels that chronicle the effects of crime on communities in Alaska (Yiddish Policemen) and Brooklyn (Brooklyn Crime Novel). -- Malia Jackson
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These compelling and intricately plotted hardboiled fiction novels offer vivid and grim depictions of New York City life. The Whites centers on police detectives and one murder investigation while Brooklyn Crime Novel is about people living amid crime and violence. -- Alicia Cavitt
These books have the appeal factors cinematic, strong sense of place, and sweeping, and they have the genre "literary fiction"; and the subjects "crime," "gentrification of cities," and "neighborhoods."
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These books have the appeal factors strong sense of place and unnamed narrator, and they have the genre "literary fiction"; and the subjects "communities," "gentrification of cities," and "neighborhoods."
Both compelling and intricately plotted crime novels describe racial tensions and feature a strong sense of place. Brooklyn Crime Novel focuses on the impact of crime on a community while Brighton's storyline centers on organized crime and investigative journalism. -- Alicia Cavitt
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These books have the appeal factors strong sense of place, atmospheric, and intricately plotted, and they have the subjects "communities," "gentrification of cities," and "neighborhoods"; and characters that are "well-developed characters."

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.
Jonathan Lethem and Michael Chabon write novels, short stories, and essays, and an interest in comics, popular culture, and using genre elements in literary fiction. They explore troubled artist and coming-of-age themes; Chabon also adds the perspective of the Jewish experience. Their well-crafted prose, replete with wordplay, evokes the setting. -- Katherine Johnson
Australian Steve Toltz and American Jonathan Lethem write idiosyncratic fiction starring eccentric characters often caught up in unusual situations. Character-driven and stylistically complex, their novels relish the peculiar without being so unusual as to be alienating or impenetrable. Toltz uses dark humor where Lethem employs a lighter wit. -- Mike Nilsson
Jonathan Lethem and Don DeLillo draw from popular culture and explore consequent trends. They play with style and mix genres to enhance the message while creating believable, sympathetic characters. Humor plays a big role, though the topics themselves are serious. -- Katherine Johnson
Philip K. Dick and Jonathan Lethem write character-centered stories that provocatively explore our future. Dick's work is more traditionally grounded in science fiction while Lethem employs a range of genres. -- Katherine Johnson
center their stories around well-drawn characters, using writing that is both experimental and accessible. Foer pushes the limits in his fiction by employing unique styles, using various formats, and utilizing meta elements, such as plots that tell a story within a story. -- Katherine Johnson
Jonathan Lethem is part of the "McSweeney's Universe" created by author and publisher Dave Eggers. Like Lethem, Eggers plays with the style of his work, telling coming-of-age stories in a nontraditional way, but creating empathetic, memorable characters. -- Katherine Johnson
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 offbeat and darkly humorous, and they have the genres "hardboiled fiction" and "satire and parodies"; and the subjects "near future," "men," and "subcultures."
These authors' works have the appeal factors offbeat, darkly humorous, and stylistically complex, and they have the genres "humorous stories" and "apocalyptic fiction"; and the subjects "near future" and "dystopias."
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Published Reviews

Booklist Review

Lethem (The Arrest, 2020) returns to Brooklyn, his signature setting and preoccupation, in the latest of his empathic, elaborate, and affecting variations on crime fiction. In this intricately excavated, breathtaking tale of imperiled childhood in a fitfully gentrifying Brooklyn neighborhood, street shakedowns are so common, parents provide children with "mugging money." Hopscotching over the past six decades with tangential forays into the deeper past, Lethem's self-critiquing narrator recounts the misadventures of the Dean Street boys, some Black, some Jewish, some with firm anchors in the neighborhood, others the offspring of hippies turned DIY renovators sprucing up brownstones and dreaming of racial harmony. The boys struggle to survive, precipitating shenanigans or finding themselves trapped in absurd, mortifying, or terrifying predicaments. One attempts to serve as a "secret emissary" between the races; others are nerds, romantics, book-fanatics, "endurers and abiders" in a world of burgeoning graffiti, skateboards, comics, and CB radios in which each block is a front in a war over race and class, insiders and outsiders, forming a "fourdimensional puzzle." Amid the churn and the narrator's reflections on his discomfiting mission to illuminate painful truths, Lethem considers a continuum of crimes, aligning, for example, white urban "pioneers" with those who violently seized Native American lands. With Brooklyn as a microcosm of human folly and strife, Lethem's virtuoso, many-faceted novel is trenchant, hilarious, wrenching, and tender.

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

The parts are better than the whole in Lethem's textured if scattershot latest (after The Arrest), an episodic look at crime in a Brooklyn neighborhood from the 1930s through 2019. The first chapter, "Quarters, Part 1," set in 1978, features two 14-year-old Boerum Hill white boys using a hacksaw to cut multiple quarters into pieces, creating "surrealist anti-money." Their story line is only resolved hundreds of pages later, after diversions involving a panoply of characters, including one known as "the Screamer" and another called "the Black kid" or "C." There are vivid vignettes, such as "Ice Cream Truck, Known Con-Artist," wherein a child who's just bought ice cream from a Mr. Softee truck witnesses a daylight sidewalk shooting in 1979; and "Guy Who Stuffs Flyers into His Bag and Says Keep Walking," in which a 20-something man from Brooklyn tries to make it as a bookseller in 1991 Manhattan, where he's surprised when a younger man approaches him on the street and doesn't try to mug him. Near the halfway point, Lethem jokes he may have lost his audience along the convoluted paths he's created; the narrator, whose identity is withheld, asks, "Anyone still reading...?" It's a bit too meandering, but fans will be pleased to find Lethem still knows his way around a New York City street scene. Agent: Eric Simonoff, WME. (Oct.)

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Kirkus Book Review

The award-winning Lethem makes a puzzling return to the scene of an earlier novel. The title of Lethem's 13th novel stirs memories of his comic-noir treasure, Motherless Brooklyn (1999), but the clear antecedent here is The Fortress of Solitude (2003); the new book stands as a kind of sociological survey of the urban street life that underpinned Fortress. The crimes involved stem largely from a real estate revolution starting in the 1960s that transformed run-down parts of Brooklyn into desirable residential areas. Lethem focuses on the same Dean Street that featured in Fortress. The narrator, who is from the neighborhood, cites the white "pioneers" who venture into mainly Black areas and renovate old buildings. With vague thoughts of fostering integration, they end up forcing their school-age boys--girls and women are scarce here--to endure getting their pocket money regularly stolen by Black youths from nearby housing projects, an intricate ritual called "yoking" in Fortress and here termed "the dance." The book consists of brief chapters with recurring characters, like the two boys who cut up quarters in a funny scheme that won't be resolved for hundreds of pages. Much of the narrative touches on youthful pastimes and traumas, from muggings to skateboards to graffiti, Spaldeens, shoplifting, and sex. The crimes range from actual ones, like theft and rape, but also implicated are poor parenting and property inflation along with the nabe-jolting sins of gentrification. The title notwithstanding, the book is at best an interesting alternative to a conventional novel. Maybe, with its dizzying array of local color, it's a memoir gone rogue, as is a lot of fiction. The narrator says "it is about what a small number of people remember" and how that knowledge "wishes and doesn't wish to come out." When it does, it's Fortress, or it's this. An entertaining, challenging read that may appeal mainly to Lethem fans and scholars. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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

*Starred Review* Lethem (The Arrest, 2020) returns to Brooklyn, his signature setting and preoccupation, in the latest of his empathic, elaborate, and affecting variations on crime fiction. In this intricately excavated, breathtaking tale of imperiled childhood in a fitfully gentrifying Brooklyn neighborhood, street shakedowns are so common, parents provide children with "mugging money." Hopscotching over the past six decades with tangential forays into the deeper past, Lethem's self-critiquing narrator recounts the misadventures of the Dean Street boys, some Black, some Jewish, some with firm anchors in the neighborhood, others the offspring of hippies turned DIY renovators sprucing up brownstones and dreaming of racial harmony. The boys struggle to survive, precipitating shenanigans or finding themselves trapped in absurd, mortifying, or terrifying predicaments. One attempts to serve as a "secret emissary" between the races; others are nerds, romantics, book-fanatics, "endurers and abiders" in a world of burgeoning graffiti, skateboards, comics, and CB radios in which each block is a front in a war over race and class, insiders and outsiders, forming a "fourdimensional puzzle." Amid the churn and the narrator's reflections on his discomfiting mission to illuminate painful truths, Lethem considers a continuum of crimes, aligning, for example, white urban "pioneers" with those who violently seized Native American lands. With Brooklyn as a microcosm of human folly and strife, Lethem's virtuoso, many-faceted novel is trenchant, hilarious, wrenching, and tender. Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.

Copyright 2023 Booklist Reviews.
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Library Journal Reviews

Author of the National Book Critics Circle Award—winning Motherless Brooklyn, Lethem circles back to the iconic borough in a story that opens in the 1970s and spans a half-century. Along the way, we meet parents, children, police, landlords, and gentrifiers, as money moves, power shifts, and lives are forever altered. With a 150,000-copy first printing. Prepub Alert. Copyright 2023 Library Journal

Copyright 2023 Library Journal.

Copyright 2023 Library Journal Copyright 2023 Library Journal.
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Publishers Weekly Reviews

The parts are better than the whole in Lethem's textured if scattershot latest (after The Arrest), an episodic look at crime in a Brooklyn neighborhood from the 1930s through 2019. The first chapter, "Quarters, Part 1," set in 1978, features two 14-year-old Boerum Hill white boys using a hacksaw to cut multiple quarters into pieces, creating "surrealist anti-money." Their story line is only resolved hundreds of pages later, after diversions involving a panoply of characters, including one known as "the Screamer" and another called "the Black kid" or "C." There are vivid vignettes, such as "Ice Cream Truck, Known Con-Artist," wherein a child who's just bought ice cream from a Mr. Softee truck witnesses a daylight sidewalk shooting in 1979; and "Guy Who Stuffs Flyers into His Bag and Says Keep Walking," in which a 20-something man from Brooklyn tries to make it as a bookseller in 1991 Manhattan, where he's surprised when a younger man approaches him on the street and doesn't try to mug him. Near the halfway point, Lethem jokes he may have lost his audience along the convoluted paths he's created; the narrator, whose identity is withheld, asks, "Anyone still reading...?" It's a bit too meandering, but fans will be pleased to find Lethem still knows his way around a New York City street scene. Agent: Eric Simonoff, WME. (Oct.)

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.

Copyright 2023 Publishers Weekly.
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Citations

APA Citation, 7th Edition (style guide)

Lethem, J. (2023). Brooklyn Crime Novel: A Novel . HarperCollins.

Chicago / Turabian - Author Date Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Lethem, Jonathan. 2023. Brooklyn Crime Novel: A Novel. HarperCollins.

Chicago / Turabian - Humanities (Notes and Bibliography) Citation, 17th Edition (style guide)

Lethem, Jonathan. Brooklyn Crime Novel: A Novel HarperCollins, 2023.

Harvard Citation (style guide)

Lethem, J. (2023). Brooklyn crime novel: a novel. HarperCollins.

MLA Citation, 9th Edition (style guide)

Lethem, Jonathan. Brooklyn Crime Novel: A Novel HarperCollins, 2023.

Note! Citations contain only title, author, edition, publisher, and year published. Citations should be used as a guideline and should be double checked for accuracy. Citation formats are based on standards as of August 2021.

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