PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
27 March 2000

Veteran novelist DeCapite (The Coming of Fabrizze, etc.) writes
dialog-centered tough-guy prose, punctuated with occasional
moments of compassion. In this two-for-one offering, he reveals
the whole spectrum of urban Italian-American living. The author
masterfully captures the details of a culture: gambling and
gamboling: "eating, drinking, eating"; Sunday afternoon
pinochle games; down-on-their-luck men name Cirio, Chooch,
Nowinsky and Screwy Phil; an ex-fighter-now-restaurateur name
Figaro; Patsy Vovo, who hosts a regular poker game; a parrot
named Paul Parrot; and superintendent Tony Zang. Go Very Highly
Trippingly To and Fro is haunted by the echoie click of billiard
balls, and concerns narrator Andy Farr, who writes bets for
a man named "Cappy" and falls head over heels for
Rachel, a feisty waitress, while awaiting the return from New
York City of his older, slightly mythic brother, Roxie, a fledgling
actor and self-professed "culture consultant." When
Roxie shows up Andy loses Rachel to his dashing sibling. Gambling
haunts the small world of The Stretch Run, the weaker of the
two tales. In each novel, however, a young writer-drifter ("writer" meaning
both one who takes bets and one who constructs sentences) finds
love, but only at the expense of losing his mentor. "Justice?" writes
DeCapite in The Stretch Run, "Forget it." Fans of
Nelson Algren will delight in DeCapite's prose, often composed
in one-sentence paragraphs and seemingly infused with canzone.
Despite the surface similarities though, DeCapite's Cleveland
is utterly his own, far away from Algren's Chicago and he brings
a Joycean ebullience to his stark, authentic depictions. Though
they unfold slowly, in a sidewise fashion, in the end each
novel packs quite a punch. With his brawny, playful dialogue,
his sparse scenic descriptions and his brisk yet deep characterizations,
DeCapite succeeds in doing what others only aim for: he has
constructed a world that feels real.
< Back to reviews