So I wrote this novel, When I Was Punk, and Publishers Weekly, which may be the most influential reviewer of books out there, reviewed it.
They called the novel, which is set in and around Tompkins Square Park in 2001, "comical" (in a good way, I presume) and "scrappy" (also in a good way, I presume).
Majorly psyched to get a review in P-Dubs.
Here it is in full:
This comical, scrappy second book from Malone in his Tomkins Square
Trilogy (after No Never No More) takes place in 2001, two years after
the first book. A recovering coke addict from Manhattan's East Village,
Conrad, 39, finishes his court-ordered one-year drug rehab treatment and
discovers his girlfriend of 10 years Anna-Jane ("AJ") has fallen in
love with rockabilly musician Ethan. She decides to breakup with Conrad.
He takes solace in working as a bartender, writing in his life journal,
and reading Jack Kerouac and F. Scott Fitzgerald novels. Meantime, the
cavalier Fluke Crowley, 18, has chosen to hang out and experience the
punk scene for a year before entering Princeton to study art or
business. After becoming a petty criminal to support his carefree
lifestyle, Fluke steals Conrad's knapsack containing his life journal,
which Fluke reads with interest. While Fluke's family is looking for him
(they've hired a private investagtor to bring him home), he run a scam
concerning a new fictitious street aphrodisiac called "Jackrabbit."
Eventually, Fluke and Conrad cross paths and reconcile their differences
just when things are turning too hot for Fluke to stick around town. He
plans a hasty exit for warmer climates and sets the stage for the last
book to complete Malone's literary project. (Sept.)
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