9781583229484
Sad Stories of the Death of Kings share button
Barry Gifford
Format Hardcover
Dimensions 5.76 (w) x 8.54 (h) x 0.84 (d)
Pages 224
Publisher Seven Stories Press
Publication Date November 2010
ISBN 9781583229484
Book ISBN 10 1583229485
About Book

Roy is a lover of adventure movies, a budding writer, and a young man slowly coming of age without the benefit of a father. Surrounding him—whether to support him or to drag him under—is the adult world of postwar Chicago, a city haunted by violence, poverty, and the redeeming power of imagination. Here are charlatans, operators, alien abductees, schoolyard nudists, and fast girls with only months to live. At the center of it all is a boy learning to navigate the compromises, disillusionments and regrets that come with the territory of living. Mixing memoir and invention, the forty-one short stories in Barry Gifford's first book for young adults bring a city—and a boy's growing consciousness—to vivid, unflinching life.

Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Gifford’s sentimental new novel tracks scrappy, precocious Roy as he finds his way in hardscrabble 1950s Chicago’s Polish ward. Roy’s life is populated by a crew of wayward boys--the Viper, Magic Frank, and Crazy Lester--who all must confront violence, mental illness, and death in their cold and windy enclave. The world is not entirely gloomy; Roy’s development as a writer and love for his mother are rays of light in even the novel’s bleakest moments. Though Roy’s adventures have the classic footloose appeal of coming-of-age adventures, it’s the rogue’s gallery of supporting characters that are most memorable, from the Albanian lothario Cubar Shog and mobbed up Sharkface Bensky to the numerous other cutthroats in Roy’s orbit. Gifford, best known for his Sailor and Lula novels (Wild at Heart; etc.), has a soft, transporting touch that makes a strong case for this being a one-sitting endeavor. (Oct.)

VOYA - Devin Burritt

Sad Stories of the Death of Kings is a compilation of bleak short stories that capture the pivotal moments in the life of Roy, a young adult growing up in post-World War II Chicago. A number of themes present in the various stories are commonplace in a coming-of-age tale—playing baseball with friends, going to the movies, separated parents, and learning to interact with the opposite sex. Mixed in with these garden variety plots, however, are stories that capture the darker side of growing up in Chicago—deaths, murders, strippers, and dealing with the mob. All of the stories included in Sad Stories of the Death of Kings are edgy enough to pique the interest of teens, but an inauthentic, adolescent voice will lose them quickly. The dialogue often reads like an adult character speaking from a young adult's mouth. Readers may be put off by the fact that Roy's character is static throughout the novel. In some stories he is eleven, in others he is sixteen, but, regardless of his age, his character speaks in the same manner, has the same revelatory moments, and fails to show signs of personal growth. While not all of the forty-one stories included in Sad Stories of the Death of Kings are good, there are a few that an older reader interested in a less nostalgic view of the past may enjoy. Reviewer: Devin Burritt