Lush Life (novel)

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Lush Life
Image:Lush Life Price.jpg
Cover to first edition hardcover of Lush Life.
Author Richard Price
Country United States
Language English
Genre(s) Novel
Publisher Farrar, Straus and Giroux
Publication date March 4, 2008
Media type Print (Hardback & Paperback)
Pages 464 pp
ISBN ISBN 0-374-29925-0
Preceded by Samaritan

Lush Life is a contemporary social novel by Richard Price. It is Price's eighth novel, and was published in 2008 by Farrar, Straus and Giroux.

Contents

[edit] Plot summary

The book is set in the Lower East Side of Manhattan, and begins with a crime that at first seems straightforward, but quickly expands into a thicket of complications. On the way home from a night of drinking, three men—cafe manager Eric Cash, bartender Ike Marcus, and a friend of Marcus'—are accosted by two muggers.[1] Marcus is shot and killed, in a manner reminiscent of the real-life murder of Nicole duFresne,[2] or the case of Willie Bosket (who is explicitly referenced by Price in the novel). NYPD Detective Matty Clark winds up investigating the crime, and keeping an eye on Ike's distraught father Billy, whose behavior becomes increasingly erratic. Cash is initially arrested for the crime, but later released when the accounts of other witnesses back up his own; his own behavior is affected as he has difficulty coping with the memory of the incident.

[edit] Reception

The novel received mostly rave reviews from a wide variety of media sources.[3][4][5] Michiko Kakutani of the New York Times wrote that Lush Life was "a visceral, heart-thumping portrait of New York City" and "no one writes better dialogue than Richard Price—not Elmore Leonard, not David Mamet, not even David Chase."[6] The Hartford Courant praised Price's ability to "embrace irony without ever being ham-handed and to create characters who refuse to be pinned down".[7] Others called it "powerful"[8] and a "damned good book",[9] and said that "every sentence is a pleasure".[10]

Some reviewers were equally positive, but not without some reservations. Salon.com writer Richard B. Woodward called the book "astonishing", but "more a collection of brilliantly realistic scenes than a book with moral weight or a convincing vision of the way New York functions in the Bloomberg era".[11] The Los Angeles Times praised it as "deftly written" and "beautifully expressive", but thought that "Price can't quite bridge the gap between this social novel and the subtleties of real life".[12]

[edit] References

[edit] External links