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OverviewOriginally published in 1944, Alan Kapelner's first novel, Lonely Boy Blues, is an intense (though not totally humorless) story of a dysfunctional family living in Brooklyn during World War 2. Written in a style that captures the rhythms of jazz and bebop, it is a precursor to the Beat novels of the 1950s. This expanded 75th-anniversary edition includes Seymour Krim's 1967 interview with the author from his collection of essays, Shake It For The World, Smartass, and features Arthur Sussman's cover artwork from the 1956 paperback edition. Legendary editor Maxwell Perkins, best known for his work on the first novels of Ernest Hemingway, F. Scott Fitzgerald, and Thomas Wolfe, wrote that Kapelner had ""a most unusual talent in narrative, in dialogue, and in perception,"" and agreed to take on the editing of Lonely Boy Blues. It would be one of his last projects before his death in 1947. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Alan Kapelner , Arthur SussmanPublisher: Tough Poets Press Imprint: Tough Poets Press Dimensions: Width: 14.80cm , Height: 0.80cm , Length: 21.00cm Weight: 0.186kg ISBN: 9780578467863ISBN 10: 0578467860 Pages: 150 Publication Date: 01 June 2019 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order ![]() We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews"""An altogether remarkable novel: a tough and bitter story of city life told in the spirit, and largely in the rhythm, of the blues. ... Overpoweringly brilliant. Lonely Boy Blues is something different and something to remember."" -- The Philadelphia Enquirer ""Syncopated prose, a novel of almost brutal realism."" -- Miami Daily News-Record ""This is an unconventional, hard-hitting story."" -- The Los Angeles Times ""One seldom encounters in recent novels such terse and photographic realism so successfully projected."" -- Minneapolis Star Tribune ""Undeniably this is a tour de force."" -- Hartford Courant ""From the very outset Alan Kapelner grips your attention, and that is due to the virtuosity of his writing."" -- Saturday Review of Literature" An altogether remarkable novel: a tough and bitter story of city life told in the spirit, and largely in the rhythm, of the blues. ... Overpoweringly brilliant. Lonely Boy Blues is something different and something to remember. -- The Philadelphia Enquirer Syncopated prose, a novel of almost brutal realism. -- Miami Daily News-Record This is an unconventional, hard-hitting story. -- The Los Angeles Times One seldom encounters in recent novels such terse and photographic realism so successfully projected. -- Minneapolis Star Tribune Undeniably this is a tour de force. -- Hartford Courant From the very outset Alan Kapelner grips your attention, and that is due to the virtuosity of his writing. -- Saturday Review of Literature ""An altogether remarkable novel: a tough and bitter story of city life told in the spirit, and largely in the rhythm, of the blues. ... Overpoweringly brilliant. Lonely Boy Blues is something different and something to remember."" -- The Philadelphia Enquirer ""Syncopated prose, a novel of almost brutal realism."" -- Miami Daily News-Record ""This is an unconventional, hard-hitting story."" -- The Los Angeles Times ""One seldom encounters in recent novels such terse and photographic realism so successfully projected."" -- Minneapolis Star Tribune ""Undeniably this is a tour de force."" -- Hartford Courant ""From the very outset Alan Kapelner grips your attention, and that is due to the virtuosity of his writing."" -- Saturday Review of Literature Author InformationAlan Kapelner was born in Brooklyn, New York, in 1933. He graduated from Erasmus Hall High School in Brooklyn's Flatbush neighborhood and later took courses at the New School. A great athlete, he was asked to play with a professional baseball team. ""I refused,"" he wrote, ""because I knew I was going to be a writer."" Kapelner had only one other novel published: All the Naked Heroes (1960). Two other novels, one titled The Air-Conditioned Hell, were completed but never published. His only other known published works were two short stories: ""Jelly, Jelly, Jelly"" in the 1955 anthology New Voices 2: American Writing Today, and ""The Walking Running People"" in the 1971 Survival Prose: An Anthology of New Writings. Kapelner died in 1990. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |