Described as "one of the best coming-of-age novels of the twentieth century," Theodore Weesner's modern American classic is now on audio!
It's 1959. Sixteen-year-old Alex Housman has just stolen his fourteenth car and frankly doesn't know why. His divorced, working-class father grinds out the night shift at the local Chevy plant in Detroit and looks forward to the flask in his glove compartment and the open bottles of booze in his Flint, Michigan, home. Broke and fighting to survive, Alex and his father face the realities of estrangement, incarceration, and even violence as their lives unfold toward the climactic episode that a New York Times reviewer called "one of the most profoundly powerful in American fiction."
In this rich, beautifully crafted story, Weesner has written a transcendent piece of literature in deceptively simple language, painting a powerful portrait of a father and a son otherwise invisible among the mundane, everyday details of life in blue-collar America. It is a true and enduring American classic.
Theodore Weesner, born in Flint, Michigan, is aptly described as a “writers’ writer” by the larger literary community. His short works have been published
in the New Yorker, Esquire, the Saturday Evening Post, the Atlantic, and Best American Short Stories. His novels—including The
True Detective, Winning the City, and Harbor Lights—have been
published to great critical acclaim in the New York Times, the Washington
Post, Harper’s, the Boston Globe, USA Today, the Chicago
Tribune, Boston magazine, and the Los Angeles Times, to name a few. He lives and works
in Portsmouth, New Hampshire.View all by Theodore Weesner