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Paradise Alley

A Novel

Audiobook
2 of 2 copies available
2 of 2 copies available

At the height of the Civil War, word spreads through the poorest quarters of New York City that a military draft is about to be implemented — a draft from which any rich man's son can buy an exemption. The outrage this inspires escalates into the worst urban conflagration in American history.

Down in the waterfront slum of Paradise Alley, three women — Deirdre Dolan O'Kane, Ruth Dove, and Maddy Boyle — struggle with their private fears as they wait for the storm to descend upon them. Deirdre, devastated by the news that her husband, Tom, has been wounded in Gettysburg, must turn for comfort and aid to two women she has always judged as morally depraved — Ruth, married to an ex-slave, and Maddy, a hard-living prostitute.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      The author of the sprawling novel DREAMLAND, set in Coney Island at the turn of the century, brings another pivotal moment in America's history to life. This time, Baker focuses on one of the worst instances of civil disobedience in our nation's past--the Draft Riots of 1863. Told from varying points of view, the story is populated by a believable assortment of hard-drinking, tough-living immigrants, political bosses, and ne'er-do-wells. The deteriorating social conditions that led to the riots are painstakingly woven into an appalling tapestry. Real and fictional people and events flesh out the past with terrible accuracy. Baker narrates with gusto, but his pronunciation mistakes and atonal singing prove distracting. A professional narrator would have better served his brilliant research and compelling characters. S.J.H. (c) AudioFile 2004, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from September 9, 2002
      In his second New York novel (after Dreamland), Baker takes a grisly event—the 1863 Civil War draft riots—and crafts a terrifying, human story bursting with all the calamity, brutality and power of the riots themselves, which may have been the worst civic disturbance in U.S. history. Baker, an American Heritage
      writer, bases his work largely on historic events—Lincoln's announcement of the draft law did in fact propel thousands of New Yorkers, mainly Irish, to burn and loot the city and murder hundreds of innocents. The book follows the difficult lives of Ruth, Deirdre and Maddy, three women living on Paradise Alley, a dingy Lower East Side passageway, during the five days of riots. Each chapter alternates among many voices, however; in addition to the women, Baker speaks through a New York Tribune
      reporter, an escaped slave, an immigrant boxer turned criminal, an army private, a volunteer fireman and other characters. The formula works brilliantly, giving Baker the opportunity to flash back to Ruth's survival of the Irish potato famine; the voyage she and so many Irish made from their ravaged country to America; and her future husband's journey from slavery in Charleston, S.C., to freedom in New Jersey. The combination of momentous events, tellingly real aspects of lower-class 19th-century life, and raw emotions like fear and pride make this a viscerally affecting story. Baker intertwines love, violence, history, adventure and social commentary to give readers an invigorating, heartbreaking tale of the immigrant experience. Agent, Henry Dunow. (Oct. 15)Forecast:Like
      Dreamland, Baker's latest will undoubtedly attract much attention, based on his name and strong word of mouth. It will be especially popular in New York, although an eight-city author tour and national advertising should bring him numerous readers outside of the city.

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  • English

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