“Gravesend is a taut exploration of the ways we hurt and
save (or try to save) one another. With unforgettable characters, a fist
for a plot and a deeply evocative setting, Boyle navigates alleys and
streets with the best of them, Lehane, Price, and Pelecanos.”
—Tom Franklin, author of Poachers, Hell at the Breech, Smonk, Crooked Letter, Crooked Letter, and The Tilted World
“Gravesend is a book that hits you in the guts the same way
David Goodis or Charles Willeford’s books do. Boyle’s mining that dark
edge of America where no one is safe, not even from themselves. A dark
ride but a seriously great ride.”
—Willy Vlautin, author of The Motel Life, Northline, Lean on Pete, and The Free
“Gravesend kicks ass! An irresistible combo of an insider’s
tour of Brooklyn and true and authentic 21st Century Noir. Boyle is one
to watch.”
—Ace Atkins, New York Times bestselling author of The Broken Places and Robert B. Parker’s Wonderland.
“William Boyle has written a terrific novel for the new millennium of
Noir. A beautiful actress returns to her Brooklyn neighborhood where
she finds the dark world she left has gotten worse. Peopled by ex-cons
and ex-cops, teenage gangsters and Russian mobsters, Gravesend
creates a claustrophobic intimacy as it moves swiftly to its shocking
end. I finished the book grateful for release from its relentless grip,
and admiring the guts it took to write such a brutal story.”
—Chris Offutt, author of Kentucky Straight, Out of the Woods, and The Good Brother
“William Boyle’s Gravesend is a bruiser and a heartbreaker
of a debut. With echoes of Lehane and Pelecanos but with a rhythm and
poignancy all its own, it’s a gripping tale of family, revenge, the
strains of the past and the losses that never leave us.”
—Megan Abbott, author of Dare Me, The End of Everything, Queenpin, The Song is You, and Die A Little
“There’s a natural, forthright style here that seems born of this
writer’s sense of duty to his characters, these denizens of non-hipster
Brooklyn living out the dooms they were born to, nurturing their vices,
the hours of their lives plaited masterfully together, their lusts and
regrets interlaced. The novel unspools without hurry but also without
an extra line, giving neither the desire nor opportunity to look up from
it. There’s an exhilaration that accompanies seeing a place and its
folks this clearly and fairly, feeling at once that the writer is
nowhere to be found and also working tirelessly to show you the right
things. Boyle arrives in thorough possession of his seedy yet venerable
world, this low-roofed urban hinterland. I can’t remember being more
convinced by the people in a novel. Boyle’s characters, each in his or
her own way, are accepting the likely future—with violence, with sex,
with resignation, with rebellion, by being upbeat. You’ll be grateful,
and it won’t take long, to be in this writer’s hands.”
—John Brandon, author of Arkansas, Citrus County, and A Million Heavens
“Boyle understands blood in all its meanings. He’s a dark poet who
knows how to draw you close so he can slip the knife into your heart. Gravesend is deeply felt, brutal, tragic, personal and beautiful. You won’t forget it.”
—Jack Pendarvis, author of The Mysterious Secret of the Valuable Treasure, Your Body is Changing, and Awesome
“Gravesend plops you down in the midst of a tragedy waiting
to happen, and as the story rumbles toward its shattering conclusion,
you’ll find yourself digging in your heels against the terrible
inevitability of it all. William Boyle lays bare a seedy corner of
Brooklyn and the tortured souls who inhabit it in his debut, and in so
doing stakes out his own turf among up-and-coming two-fisted writers.”
—Richard Lange, author of Dead Boys, This Wicked World, and Angel Baby