“An utterly original L.A. novel . . . the fiction debut of the year.””Newsday, from Our Favorite Books of the Year
“Kaye describes the city in richly evocative detail, suffusing it with real feeling. . . . His Los Angeles is replete with awful happenings, but it’s also beguiling”a magic space where human dreams have the chance to incarnate (though usually to fall).””Gary Indiana, Los Angeles Times Book Review
“John Kaye knows this ultra-noir territory well, expertly drawing us into a sad and frightening wor
ld.””Ruth Coughlin, The New York Times Book Review
“Kaye has a pitch-perfect ear for his hometown and such a generous heart for his characters that you can’t help but adore his Burk. A kind of Bruce Wagner with soul, Kaye follows in the tradition of Nathaniel West, whose Day of the Locust was, until now, the book about the seamy flipside of a glittery world.”‘sara Nelson, America Online: The Book Report
“Kaye’s touch is so light, the naturalism of his scenes is like an ambush.””Greil Marcus, Interview
“This is an extraordinary, imaginative work . . . a real zinger, like Six Degrees of Separation spanning three decades of Hollywood history.””Library Journal
‘set firmly in the tradition of Nathanael West. Here’s the sordid underside of big-time film, incorporating that most elusive of qualities in movieland”a sense of history. . . . Memorably captures the sprawling madness and demonic myths of America’s dream factory.””Kirkus Reviews
“Kaye has a feeling for quick-and-dirty drama and 1940s’70s Southern California scenery that marks him as a veteran of the lots.””Publishers Weekly
“In his richly atmospheric first novel, screenwriter Kaye conjures a Hollywood peopled by emotionally damaged women and inebriated, over-the-hill actors. . . . Using cinematic vignettes, Kaye offers a dark, bittersweet portrait of Hollywood’s bit players.””Booklist