The Sabotage Cafe
Joshua Furst(Author)
Vintage (Publisher)
Book
Paperback/Softback
272 pages
978-0-09-947456-2 (ISBN)
Description
As a young woman in the 1980's, Julia became entangled with the emerging punk scene in Minneapolis - in particular with the band Nobody's fool - until a mysterious and unspeakable catastrophe delivers her to a husband and the suburbs. Battered by mental illness, haunted by memories and grief that stretching back to her childhood, she is unable to put her past behind her - or refrain from making her daughter Cheryl into a vessel for her own hopes and fears. So it comes as little surprise when 16 year-old Cheryl packs a bag and runs away. Exactly where is anyone's guess, though as Julia envisions her daughter's every move from the house through the city's outskirts and into the city - she relives her own bygone experiences in the very same place, where the radical fringe converge.Here amidst a group of would-be revolutionaries squatting in the Sabotage Cafe, Cheryl re-enacts her mothers troubled coming-of-age, initiated as she is into a sullied melange of drugs, awkward sex, glib anarchy and acts of vandalism and violence that throw into question everything that she, in her mothers mind's eye, has run from and wishes to become.
A chilling, mesmerizing portrait of todays innocents burdened with the fallout of their parent's rebellion in addition to their own, "The Sabotage Cafe" is an unforgettable tour de force of insight and compassion, a brilliant first novel by a writer in full, ambitious command of his craft.
A chilling, mesmerizing portrait of todays innocents burdened with the fallout of their parent's rebellion in addition to their own, "The Sabotage Cafe" is an unforgettable tour de force of insight and compassion, a brilliant first novel by a writer in full, ambitious command of his craft.
Reviews / Votes
Skillfully and ingeniously written, this gripping account presents the devastating effect of a mother's instability on her child ... Highly recommended Library Journal Joshua Furst's The Sabotage Cafe renders beautifully-through both its observational intelligence and the shrewd deployment of a quietly radical and flexible point of view-the obsessive neediness of a mother whose own past screwups make her all the more terrified for her daughter. As it does, it provides a harrowing account of the way, for better and very much for worse, we cling to the notion that we live inside our children and they live inside us. Jim Shepard Flawless eloquence... The reader cares immensely how it ends... Remarkable. No reader of fiction, whether a fan of punk music or not, should miss it Washington Times this is a taut, mesmerising debut The Herald Furst is an impressively sharp, compassionate and morally scrupulous anatomist of human relationships New York TimesMore details
Language
English
Place of publication
London
United Kingdom
Publishing group
Vintage Publishing
Product notice
Paperback (UK-B)
Dimensions
Height: 198 mm
Width: 129 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-09-947456-2 (9780099474562)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Other editions
Additional editions

Person
A graduate of the Iowa Writers' Workshop, Joshua Furst has written several plays produced in New York, where for a decade he also taught in the public schools. He is the author of Short People an acclaimed collection of stories. He lives in New York City.