Format: Hardback
A rollicking, satirical debut novel about a gun-store-owning father and son forced to live together after a near-death experience--an unflinching look at the absurdities of contemporary capitalism and what it means to be a family in America today. "Honest, highwire, virtuosic writing that summons up the world with all its charms and hazards." --George Saunders, author of Liberation Day "This funny as hell tale kept me moved to the core. Unputdownable." --Mary Karr, author of Lit Even though his firearms store is failing, things are looking up for David Rizzo. His son, Nick, has just recovered after a near-fatal overdose, which means one thing: Rizzo can use Nick's resurrection to create the most compelling television commercial for a gun emporium that the world has ever seen. After all, this is America, Rizzo tells himself. Surely anything is possible. But the relationship between father and son is fragile, mired in mutual disappointment. And when the pair embarks on their scheme to avoid bankruptcy, a high stakes crash of hijinks, hope, and disaster ensues. Featuring a cast of unforgettable characters, this razor-sharp social satire lays bare both the gun and opioid crises. Fans of Don DeLillo and Stephen Markley will be thrilled by this smart, inventive debut.
CONTRIBUTORS: Sammartino
EAN: 9781982196745
COUNTRY: United States
PAGES:
WEIGHT: 349 g
HEIGHT: 213 cm
PUBLISHED BY: Simon & Schuster
DATE PUBLISHED: 2024-01-23
CITY:
GENRE: FICTION / Literary, FICTION / Family Life / General, FICTION / Small Town & Rural, FICTION / World Literature / American / 21st Century
WIDTH: 140 cm
SPINE:
Book Themes:
Modern and contemporary fiction: general and literary, Family life fiction, Narrative theme: Sense of place
"What a taut, energetic, tender, and wholly original debut novel Alexander Sammartino has written. He knows something deep about the dark heart of America that somehow doesn't stop him from writing about it with genuine, goofy love. Somewhere, Denis Johnson and Saul Bellow are smiling because their lineage--that of honest, highwire, virtuosic writing that summons up the world with all its charms and hazards, has found a worthy heir."--George Saunders, author of Liberation Day "Last Acts announces a brilliant new voice. Sammartino is precise, funny and will break your heart all at once. Not to be missed."--Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, author of Chain Gang All Stars "It's hard to believe Last Acts is a first novel. Sammartino's brilliance and originality shine out from every page of this masterful debut."--Jenny Offill, author of Weather "Alexander Sammartino has penned an astonishing baller of a book so pitch perfect in voice (Tony Soprano meets Samuel Beckett) I predict it'll be the sleeper hit of the year. A gun-store-owning dad tries to save his unmoored dope fiend son, the latter literally back from the dead. But some canyon-sized gap stretches between the floundering pair. Yes it's a send up of American masculinity circling the drain. Or is it? This funny as hell tale moved me to the core. Unputdownable."--Mary Karr, author of Lit and Tropic of Squalor "A sad, hilarious father-son redemption story that touches every American third rail: guns, drugs, religion . . . Sammartino is heir to the 20th century American masters: DeLillo, Pynchon, McCarthy, Wallace. He's as smart and as funny and as electric a stylist and as spot-on about the dark societal carnival we're all doing our best to survive."--Jonathan Dee, author of Sugar Street "Last Acts is an astonishingly strong debut, big hearted and hilarious. I swear every sentence in this novel is glorious. Sammartino writes like a millennial Don DeLillo... Rizzo is a singular and great American character: a tender-but-obtuse father, a confidence man with no confidence, a charismatic loser with a voice you can't help but love."--Dana Spiotta, author of Wayward
Alexander Sammartino lives in Brooklyn. He received his MFA from Syracuse University. Last Acts is his first novel.