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A Diet of Treacle

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
Anita Carbone was a good girl—and it bored her. That's why she took the long subway ride down to Greenwich Village, home of the Beats and the stoners, home to every kind of misfit and dropout and free spirit you could imagine. It was where she met Joe Milani, the troubled young war veteran with the gentle touch. But it was also where she met his drug-dealing roommate—a man whose unnatural appetites led to murder ...
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    • AudioFile Magazine
      It's 1961 in Greenwich Village. A DIET OF TREACLE chronicles the beat lifestyle of three lost souls: Shank, the pot seller; Joe, the mixed-up war vet, and Anita, the college dropout. The complication they don't need is murder. But, in a flash, there it is. It's tough for listeners to embrace any of these characters. Only listeners who were adults in 1961 will grasp the reality of this story. Narrator Christian Conn almost saves the day. As his outstanding presentation captures the essence of these characters, his clear, crisp delivery provides a unique identity for each. Still, this painful study of human nature may not be for everyone. The story is tough to follow unless you lived in the time period. T.J.M. (c) AudioFile 2008, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      October 29, 2007
      Reprinted for the first time since its pseudonymous publication nearly 50 years ago, this tour of the 1950s Manhattan underworld begins with Anita, a good college girl with a bright but predictable future, who comes to Greenwich Village to find what else is out there. Block’s New York is a noir wonderland, populated with junkies and beatsters (the dark predecessor to the modern hipster) spouting angular tough-guy dialogue, in which Anita plays curious, confused Alice. Down the rabbit hole, she meets Joe, an aimless loser, and his roommate, Shank, a violent drug dealer whose earnings provide them with a life of leisure. When psychopathic Shank murders a cop, however, they all go on the run toward an uncertain fate. Block effortlessly immerses himself in the mind space of Joe and Shank, reporting their world of drugs, sex and disaffection with a matter-of-factness that hits hard, all the more convincing because Block never makes an overt effort to convince. A potboiler morality play at its finest, the novel doesn’t deliver much action until its last third, but the slow build of the first two will give readers the delicious (and all-too-rare) feeling that anything could happen.

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