The jealous kind

James Lee Burke, 1936-

Large print - 2016

On its surface, life in Houston is as you would expect: drive-in restaurants, souped-up cars, jukeboxes, teenagers discovering their sexuality. But beneath the glitz and superficial normalcy, a class war has begun, and it is nothing like the conventional portrayal of the decade. Against this backdrop Aaron Holland Broussard discovers the poignancy of first love and a world of violence he did not know existed. When Aaron spots the beautiful and gifted Valerie Epstein fighting with her boyfriend, Grady Harrelson, at a Galveston drive-in, he inadvertently challenges the power of the Mob and one of the richest families in Texas. He also discovers he must find the courage his father had found as an American soldier in the Great War.

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Subjects
Genres
Historical fiction
Bildungsromans
Published
Waterville, Maine : Wheeler Publishing Large Print 2016.
Language
English
Main Author
James Lee Burke, 1936- (author)
Edition
Large print edition
Physical Description
597 pages (large print) ; 23 cm
ISBN
9781410491640
Contents unavailable.
Review by New York Times Review

Strife between fathers and sons propels this acrid portrait of 1950s Houston, the latest of Burke's Holland family novels. Aaron Holland Broussard, as he stiffly introduces himself, is a teenager ensnared by a bipolar mother and an alcoholic father. He takes solace in his pets, a Gibson guitar, the occasional bull ride. After he intervenes in a spat between Valerie Epstein ("known for her smile and singing voice and straight A's") and her rich, swaggering beau, the son of a local tycoon keen on eugenics and Ayn Rand, the seemingly negligible encounter precipitates a host of clashes - with a hot rod full of greasers; a mob mistress; a sadistic mob enforcer and his unhinged son; an ex-Communist and an ex-O.S.S. agent; a dogged detective; a cadre of heroin dealers; a corps of Sicilian assassins. Beware whiplash: Burke likes things fast and furious. The author, in fact, maintains command, even through Aaron's woefully convenient spells of amnesia. This thoroughgoing entertainment is garnished with descriptions both delightful (a car painted "a creamy pink that you could eat with a spoon") and less so (a "guy sitting behind the steering wheel like a tall drink of water") and a slowly accumulating poignancy. As the paternal relationships of Aaron's contemporaries implode, he uncovers quiet strength in his own principled father. Burke hammers the tension between his old-fashioned, charmingly naïve hero and the unfolding bedlam. Even after a Mafioso menaces Aaron ("I'll pull your insides out with a pair of pliers"), the boy clings to his optimism. Surely most folks, he tells himself, are "better than we think they are."

Copyright (c) The New York Times Company [January 1, 2017]