Norman Green discusses his novel "Way Past Legal"
Series: Poets of the Tabloid Murder
From: Steven Nester
Length: 00:28:58
Also in the Poets of the Tabloid Murder series
Nick Tosches discusses "Save the Last Dance for Satan"
(00:30:45)
From: Steven Nester
The author of seventeen books, Nick Tosches lives in New York City.
Tess Gerritsen discusses "The Silent Girl"
(00:28:22)
From: Steven Nester
A physician and the author of fourteen novels, Tess Gerritsen lives in Maine.
Jeff Abbott discusses "Adrenaline"
(00:28:34)
From: Steven Nester
Jeff Abbott is a writer living in Texas.
Elizabeth Brundage discusses "A Stranger Like You"
(00:25:03)
From: Steven Nester
Elizabeth Brundage is a writer who lives in upstate New York.
James Rollins talks about "The Devil Colony"
(00:24:29)
From: Steven Nester
James Rollins is a writer and veterinarian and lives in the Sierra Nevada mountains.
Patrick DeWitt discusses The Sisters Brothers
(00:27:37)
From: Steven Nester
Patrick DeWitt is a novelist who lives in Oregon.
Mark Seal discusses "The Man in the Rockefeller Suit"
(00:29:17)
From: Steven Nester
A journalist for thirty-five years, Mark Seal is a contributing editor at Vanity Fair.
Ace Atkins discusses "Infamous"
(00:29:45)
From: Steven Nester
Ace Atkins is the author of eight novels. He lives on a farm in Mississippi.
William Dietrich discusses "The Barbary Pirates"
(00:30:54)
From: Steven Nester
William Dietrich is a Pulitzer Prize winning journalist, an
educator, and a novelist.
Hallie Ephron discusses "Come and Find Me'
(00:28:30)
From: Steven Nester
Hallie Ephron is a journalist and fiction writer living in New England.
Piece Description
From Publishers Weekly
Green's third novel (after Shooting Dr. Jack and The Angel of Montague Street) starts like a gritty crime yarn, told in slangy, crackling first-person prose by its tough but likable hero, an ex-con named Manny Williams. But early on, the story takes an unusual detour into something more like a coming-of-age tale. Turning the tables on his partner, Rosey, who, in a deft bait and switch, has managed to keep all the loot from a successful heist, Manny burgles his crony's cache in New York. Then he sneaks his adorable five-year-old son, Nicky, out of foster care and hits the open road. When their car breaks down, the two stop in Maine, at the home of generous strangers Louis and Eleanor, who become surrogate grandparents in short order. Trouble inevitably follows, but not before Manny has come to know and like an assortment of good-hearted locals. Ironically, one is the town sheriff, Bookman, who asks Manny to help him with a problem: his deputy, Hopkins, has a habit of beating his girlfriend, Brenda, and Bookman wants to cure him of it. Manny, of course, has reasons of his own for not getting involved, but he knows the right thing to do even if hasn't always done it in his life. As he grows attached to the people around him, he gradually learns that he can't run from trouble: "I needed to stop taking the easy way out, stop sneaking out the back window, stop running away. I always thought I was so fucking smart." That lesson is brought home to him with brutal force when his past comes back to haunt him. By breaking with formula conventions, Green creates genuine suspense and richly rewards the reader.
Ruta Jordans
Posted on October 30, 2009 at 11:40 AM | Permalink
Good job!
Living in Washington County, it was a pleasant surprise for me to find a guy from Brooklyn or Jersey actually get Washington County. In the end, I wished Manny had bought that camp on Deer Island (I like happy endings and completion). There is something here that pulls people in and calls them back if they leave. You did a good job of portraying it. As far as the interview - that guy did not get it.