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Richard Price : Freedomland before purchasing it in order to gage whether or not it would be worth my time, and all praised Freedomland:

1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Imaginative but real plot, classy dialogueBy CustomerThis guy's my favourite fiction writer these days, and I think I've enjoyed this book more than any of his others I've read. Despite the cultural differences between us (I'm a country hermit on the Qld/NSW border, a long way from New York), I get much of his humour, and there's plenty in there to get, along with suspense, pathos, tragedy, and a whole lot of other feelings and moods that he creates so effortlessly - perhaps not but he makes it look effortless.I like also that he writes a story right to the end, without losing the realisticity (well may you underline in red) of its direction and arrival.My friends, if I had any, would I think see my tastes as somewhat alien so my recommendation may not be worth much to anyone, but I'm happy to go on record with it all the same.Keep writing Richard, it's a wasteland out there apart from your work.1 of 1 people found the following review helpful. Bridging Separate CommunitiesBy DennisThis is not an easy book to get through because of the intense emotions and the bleak worlds it portrays. After I had finished Price's more recent novel, I was expecting more focus on the police and the victims of injustice and oppression, but this is much more. It is an opening up of a mind in turmoil, a much broader look at the variety of law enforcement players, and more realism on the paucity of options available in American society. It captures the humanity of so many people.0 of 0 people found the following review helpful. riveting darkBy John A. BrissetteHaving worked, gone to school all but lived in Jersey City for years, I was drawn to reading this book that was inspired by the things the author saw when living there. It proved to be the riveting, dark, gritty urban crime drama it is claimed to be. It struggles slightly at a few points in the middle as the story gets bogged down by the author's detailed character scene development. However, it's worth it. The characters location are so vividly developed that they never not seem to be real.

In 1998, Richard Price returned to the gritty urban landscape of his national bestseller to produce Freedomland, a searing and unforgettable novel about a hijacked car, a missing child, and an embattled neighborhood polarized by racism, distrust, and accusation. Freedomland hit bestseller lists from coast to coast, including those of the Boston Globe, USA Today and Los Angeles Times; garnered universally rave reviews; and was selected as the Grand Prize Winner of the Imus American Book Award and as a New York Times Notable Book. On May 11, this highly lauded bestseller is available in paperback for the first time. A white woman, her hands gashed and bloody, stumbles into an inner-city emergency room and announces that she has just been carjacked by a black man. But then comes the horrifying twist: Her young son was asleep in the back seat, and he has now disappeared into the night.So begins Richard Price's electrifying new novel, a tale set on the same turf--Dempsey, New Jersey--as Clockers. Assigned to investigate the case of Brenda Martin's missing child is detective Lorenzo Council, a local son of the very housing project targeted as the scene of the crime. Under a white-hot media glare, Lorenzo launches an all-out search for the abducted boy, even as he quietly explores a different possibility: Does Brenda Martin know a lot more about her son's disappearance than she's admitting?Right behind Lorenzo is Jesse Haus, an ambitious young reporter from the city's evening paper. Almost immediately, Jesse suspects Brenda of hiding something. Relentlessly, she works her way into the distraught mother's fragile world, befriending her even as she looks for the chance to break the biggest story of her career.As the search for the alleged carjacker intensifies, so does the simmering racial tension between Dempsey and its mostly white neighbor, Gannon. And when the Gannon police arrest a black man from Dempsey and declare him a suspect, the animosity between the two cities threatens to boil over into violence. With the media swarming and the mood turning increasingly ugly, Lorenzo must take desperate measures to get to the bottom of Brenda Martin's story.At once a suspenseful mystery and a brilliant portrait of two cities locked in a death-grip of explosive rage, Freedomland reveals the heart of the urban American experience--dislocated, furious, yearning--as never before. Richard Price has created a vibrant, gut-wrenching masterpiece whose images will remain long after the final, devastating pages.From the Paperback edition.

.com In Freedomland, Richard Price returns to the gritty terrain he first explored in Clockers. This time, the fictional (but all too convincing) urban eyesore of Dempsy, New Jersey, is convulsed by a high-profile carjacking. A single mom named Brenda Martin insists that a man stopped her car, yanked her from behind the wheel, and drove off with the vehicle--and her young son. Behind these horrific facts looms another: the victim is white and the perpetrator is black. Immediately the racial calculus of American life comes to bear on the crime, which becomes a focus for long- smoldering animosities. As a three-ring circus of media, cops, and gawkers converges on the crime scene, Dempsy and the adjoining white community of Gannon seem primed for an explosion. Price passes the narrative baton back and forth between Lorenzo Council, an ambitious black detective, and Jesse Haus, a no-less-ambitious reporter for the local paper. Lorenzo's street-smart, agitated voice is the more convincing of the two. Jesse, with her frantic compulsion to squeeze local color from the crisis, never quite attains three dimensions--although her outsider's relationship to her material suggests some faint, fascinating echo of the author's. In any case, Price allows the story to proceed at an irresistible slow burn. His ear for dialogue is as sharp as ever, and nobody casts a colder or more accurate eye on our fin-de-siècle urban existence.From Publishers WeeklySet in the same blasted New Jersey ghetto as his much-admired Clockers (1992), Price's first novel since that bestseller is less a sequel than a monumental complement played in minor key, a re-visitation by an author who's older, sadder, wiser. The story flows from an event drawn from headlines: Brenda Martin, a white woman, staggers bleeding into a hospital to claim that her car has been hijacked by a black man?with her four-year-old son in the backseat. The jacking allegedly occurred in the park that divides the largely black city of Dempsey from the white-dominated city of Gannon. In response, Gannon cops seal off and invade D-Town, inflaming racial tensions and attracting an army of media. As in Clockers, Price again scans urban life through two protagonists, one black, one white?here, black Dempsey cop Lorenzo Council and white local reporter Jesse Haus. As both draw close to grief-crazed Brenda, one question propels the narrative: Is she telling the truth? The answer and its violent aftermath are equally inevitable, as Price snares the surface and the substance of America caught in a slow-motion riot of racial rage. His language is street-fresh, his dialogue as if eavesdropped; his characters are soulful, flawed, dead real. Price's experience as a screenwriter (, etc.) shows in the predictable dramatic arc of his tale, but the novel is no less powerful for its popular bent. Within its structural confines, the story line veers in unexpected directions, with each detour bringing readers closer to Price's ultimate vision?that our nation's hope lies not in social movements but in the flame of humaneness that flickers in each of us, cop and criminal, black and white. 125,000 first printing; $175,000 ad/promo; BOMC and QPB alternates; first serial to the New Yorker; film rights to Scott Rudin/Paramount for $2 million; simultaneous BDD audio; author tour. Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.From Library JournalPrice hits another home run with this follow-up to the critically acclaimed Clockers, set in the fictional city of Dempsy, NJ, a place that bears both spiritual and geographical similarities to Jersey City, NJ. At the tale's vortex is Brenda Martin, a fragile, white single mother who was apparently pulled from her car by a black male while driving through Dempsy's Armstrong housing project. When a hysterical Brenda blurts out that her four-year-old son was asleep in the back seat at the time of the carjacking, a swarm of reporters, cops, and the curious descend on Dempsy. With cops from neighboring Gannon?Brenda's hometown?aggressively laying seige to Armstrong, Dempsy detective Lorenzo Council, himself an Armstrong product, must negotiate a political and social minefield as racial animosities between Dempsy and Gannon threaten to explode. Price's characters are, as usual, dead-on, and the his eye for unflinchingly capturing humans at their very best?and very worst?is unrivaled. Highly recommended.?Mark Annichiarico, "Library Journal"Copyright 1998 Reed Business Information, Inc.

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