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Summary
Summary
LONGLISTED for the 2017 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION
An urgent, essential collection of stories about immigration, broken dreams, Los Angeles gang members, Latin American families, and other tales of high stakes journeys, from the award-winning author of War by Candlelight and At Night We Walk in Circles .
Migration. Betrayal. Family secrets. Doomed love. Uncertain futures. In Daniel Alarcón's hands, these are transformed into deeply human stories with high stakes. In "The Thousands," people are on the move and forging new paths; hope and heartbreak abound. A man deals with the fallout of his blind relatives' mysterious deaths and his father's mental breakdown and incarceration in "The Bridge." A gang member discovers a way to forgiveness and redemption through the haze of violence and trauma in "The Ballad of Rocky Rontal." And in the tour de force novella, "The Auroras", a man severs himself from his old life and seeks to make a new one in a new city, only to find himself seduced and controlled by a powerful woman. Richly drawn, full of unforgettable characters, The King is Always Above the People reveals experiences both unsettling and unknown, and yet eerily familiar in this new world.
Author Notes
Daniel Alarcón is the author of At Night We Walk in Circles , which was a finalist for the 2014 Pen-Faulkner Award, as well as the story collection War by Candlelight , the novel Lost City Radio , and the graphic novel City of Clowns . His writing has appeared in the New Yorker , the New York Times Magazine , Granta , n+1 , and Harpers , and he was named one of the New Yorker's "20 Under 40." He is Executive Producer of "Radio Ambulante," distributed by NPR, and is an assistant professor of broadcast journalism at the Columbia University School of Journalism in New York.
Reviews (5)
Publisher's Weekly Review
Alarcón (At Night We Walk In Circles) delivers a superb collection of 10 stories about wanderers, lovers, and fractured families. The fiery "The Ballad of Rocky Rontal" fictionalizes the true story of a violent gang member's tenuous emotional journey toward forgiveness, while "The Provincials" follows the voyage of a father and son to the father's hometown to address the postmortem details of an estranged relative. Bereavement also drives "The Bridge," which places Alarcón's protagonist, named executor of the estate of his recently deceased uncle and aunt, in the center of a mystery, sifting through family stories and conflicting claims to find the truth behind the couple's deaths. In the powerful "The Auroras," a man fleeing from his wife and academic life falls for a married woman and slowly yields to her power, and "República and Grau" pairs a child with a blind beggar who hopes to scam locals for loose change. Throughout the collection, Alarcón writes with a spellbinding voice and creates a striking cast of characters. Each narrative lands masterfully and memorably, showcasing Alarcón's immense talent. (Oct.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
Booklist Review
Dynamic novelist and journalist Alarcón (City of Clowns, 2015) delivers a collection of loosely affiliated short stories, each buzzing and alive with recurrent figures and neighborhoods, like the young man who ventures into the city from his small provincial town, the mourning extended family that surfaces at a wake, and the busy denizens of sprawling urban slums introduced in the first story, The Thousands. Several stories occupy this unspecified but recognizable third world outside the U.S. but adjacent to it. The Bridge recounts the accidental deaths of a blind couple, an uncle and aunt who bequeath their dusty, darkened apartment to an unassuming relative. Other stories revel in joyous departure from any and all expectations. Abraham Lincoln Has Been Shot is an an oddball love story about the assassinated president that takes place in Chicago's Wicker Park neighborhood, apparently outside any established time. The brief, hilarious Extinct Anatomies recounts an awkwardly erotic dentistry appointment. Alarcón's gift for generating real, tangible characters propels readers through his recognizable yet half-real worlds.--Báez, Diego Copyright 2017 Booklist
New York Review of Books Review
ENEMIES AND NEIGHBORS: Arabs and Jews in Palestine and Israel, 1917-2017, by Ian Black. (Atlantic Monthly, $30.) Black, a veteran correspondent for The Guardian, argues in this sweeping history that Zionism and Palestinian nationalism were irreconcilable from the start, and that peace is as remote as ever. THE KING IS ALWAYS ABOVE THE PEOPLE: Stories, by Daniel Alarcon. (Riverhead Books, $27.) The stories in this slim, affecting work of fiction feature young men in various states of displacement after dictatorship yields to fragile democracy in an unnamed country. Alarcon, who also happens to be a gifted journalist, couples narrative experimentation with imaginative empathy. TEXAS BLOOD: Seven Generations Among the Outlaws, Ranchers, Indians, Missionaries, Soldiers, and Smugglers of the Borderlands, by Roger D. Hodge. (Knopf, $28.95.) Hodge's fervent pastiche of memory and reportage and history tells the story of South Texas as it intersects with generations of his ancestors. SOLAR BONES, by Mike McCormack. (Soho Press, $25.) A civil engineer sits in his kitchen feeling inexplicably disoriented, as if untethered from the world. In fact, he is dead, a ghost, even if he does not realize it. This wonderfully original book owes a debt to modernism but is up to something all its own. ISTANBUL: A Tale of Three Cities, by Bettany Hughes. (Da Capo, $40.) A British scholar known for her popular television documentaries shows readers how a prehistoric settlement evolved through the centuries into a great metropolis, the crossroads where East meets West. THE WRITTEN WORLD: The Power of Stories to Shape People, History, Civilization, by Martin Puchner. (Random House, $32.) Puchner, an English professor at Harvard, makes the case for literature's pervasive importance as a force that has shaped the societies we have built and our very sensibilities as human beings. THE FLOATING WORLD, by C. Morgan Babst. (Algonquin, $26.95.) An inescapable, almost oppressive sense of loss permeates each page of this powerful debut novel about a mixed-race New Orleans family in the days after Hurricane Katrina. As an elegy for a ruined city, it is infused with soulful details. ROBICHEAUX, by James Lee Burke. (Simon & Schuster, $27.99.) The Iberia Parish sheriff's detective tangles with mob bosses and crooked politicians in this latest installment in a crime series steeped in the history and lore of the Louisiana bayous. THREE FLOORS UP, by Eshkol Nevo. (Other Press, paper, $16.95.) Three linked novellas about life in an Israeli apartment building capture the lies we tell ourselves and others in order to construct identity. The full reviews of these and other recent books are on the web: nytimes.com/books
Kirkus Review
A clutch of well-turned stories filled with characters concerned with the limits of their personalities."The Ballad of Rocky Rontal," a brief, early story in Alarcn's (City of Clowns, 2015, etc.) second collection, turns on a question that recurs throughout the book: what circumstances make us who we are, and how much can we change? Rocky grows up in an abusive home and murders a man as an adult, but after 32 years in prison he returns to a "world that's disappointingly familiar," and Alarcn is deliberately vague about how much he is (or can be) rehabilitated. Similarly, "Repblica and Grau" turns on a 10-year-old boy who's put to work by his father to help a blind man beg on the streets, playing with the question of how much looking like a beggar actually makes him one. And in the closing "The Auroras," a man takes a one-year leave from his university job and stumbles into a relationship with a married woman; after lying about being a doctor, a host of other questions rises up about what he can make himself into (a violent person, for one), culminating in a twist ending that shows how liberating your sense of self can be a kind of entrapment. The tone throughout the stories is flat and nonjudgmental, though sometimes you can sense a smirk in Alarcn's prose about the predicaments: in "The Bridge" a blind couple falls "steadily, lovingly, to [their] death[s]" off a bridge broken in an accident, and a man pretending to be his brother in "The Provincials" takes a detour into the format of a comic play. But the overall message is that we mess with our personalities at our peril. A smart and understated collection that puts some new twists on old-fashioned identity crises. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Library Journal Review
As in Alarcón's 2005 collection, War by Candlelight, different types of relationships unite the ten stories in this second collection. Variable in length as well as style, the pieces range from three to 58 pages, with four longer ones more sustained and better developed. Alarcón breaks up the going-home tale of "The Provincials" by accelerating part of the action with a short play. "The Bridge" juxtaposes the double whammy of a man dealing with an incarcerated, mentally unstable father and the sudden loss of his blind uncle. In "The Auroras," Hernán leaves an abusive relationship only to end up in an even worse one. The master-servant relationship in "República and Grau" re-creates the picaresque tradition in a modern, busy metropolitan intersection. Though some of these stories have already been published independently over the past decade, including translations into Spanish (not by the author), all share universal themes of love, death, acculturation, but above all, familial discord that transcends ethnicity. VERDICT Peruvian-born but Alabama-bred and presently on the journalism faculty at Columbia University, Alarcón was named one of The New Yorker's "20 under 40"; these stories enhance his reputation with their realistic writing style and highly believable characters. [See Prepub Alert, 4/24/17.]-Lawrence Olszewski, North Central State Coll., Mansfield, OH © Copyright 2017. Library Journals LLC, a wholly owned subsidiary of Media Source, Inc. No redistribution permitted.