A nine-year-old boy is overwhelmed by the pain of his irrationally raging father and his artistically stifled mother, in a situation that causes him to take to the open road with a young kindred spirit named Darla.
A nine-year-old boy, growing up on the upper west side of Manhattan in the late 1970s, is overwhelmed by the pain of his irrationally raging father and his artistically stifled mother, a situation that causes him to take to the open road with young kindred spirit Darla. A first novel. Reprint. 20,000 first printing.
After spending another morning hiding in the clothes hamper eavesdropping on his miserable parents, Bruiser realizes it's time to change his life. It's New York City during the late 1970s, and in the middle of a chilly autumn night he takes to the open road with Darla, a kindred spirit who lives across the alleyway. Their flight from the mounting tensions of home -- an adventure dotted with frightening episodes and surprising revelations -- is a journey in search of liberation and emotional truth.
This is Bruiser's tale in his own words, captured by first-time novelist Ian Chorão with uncanny precision and an ear for the staccato rhythms of childhood consciousness. Refreshingly free of sentimentality, Bruiser confronts the darkness and violence of life even as it illuminates its wonder and sweetness.