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Bronx Boy: A Memoir [Hardcover]

Jerome Charyn (Author)


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Book Description

April 11, 2002
Jerome Charyn's three-part memoir of his boyhood in the Bronx has all the imagery and color of an enchanting and entertaining novel -- someone has said that it captures the author's world so accurately that it can't possibly be true. Bronx Boy, like The Dark Lady of Belorusse and The Black Swan, both selected by The New York Times as Notable Books of the Year, is a tour de force of memory and imagination. In this third and final installment, the higher truths of a masterly writer's art render moot the question of exactly where the real world ends and Charyn's imagined world begins.

Still known as "Baby" although a younger brother has come along, young Charyn makes pocket money delivering eggs, belongs to a group of 12-year-old wannabe gangsters that meet in a soda shop run by an ex-con, and spends afternoons telling stories to the adoring wife of a wealthy Russian émigré. He becomes famous for his black-and-tans -- a concoction of coffee ice cream, seltzer, milk, chocolate sauce, crushed pecans -- and "a touch of bitterness that may have been the Bronx." So famous, indeed, that he walks away the winner of an annual black-and-tan contest sponsored by the real-life top gangster called "The Little Man" -- Meyer Lansky.

In Charyn's hands, the often ridiculed Bronx is a magic place, as full of odd and wonderful characters as a three-ring circus. And at the center of it all, young "Baby," not as lucky in love as he would like to be, drinking it all in, putting his own extraordinary take on it. Charyn looks back at this with his singular vision, and records it all for us with the skill of the fine writer he is. This is a delightful and often moving story of a childhood that could only have been lived in New York in the fifties, a New York experience that could only have taken place in the Bronx of those days, a growing-up saga that could only have been captured by this singular author.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

By age 14, Jerome "Baby" Charyn had been hired by Jewish gangster Meyer Lansky to mix ice cream sodas. He'd established an on-again, off-again relationship with a gang headed by a heroin addict and pimped for the gang leader's girlfriend. He was familiar with Flaubert and Dostoyevski. He'd helped his blind mother (who looked like Joan Crawford) to deal a better hand of poker and, as a pimp, earned a better salary than his father (who looked like Clark Gable). Charyn, the author of more than 30 books, mostly fiction, writes this final installment of his three-part memoir (after The Black Swan and Captain Kidd) in fast, darting sentences: "I danced with Anita, her chest against mine. I was the luckiest lad at junior high. But there wasn't even a stirring in my pants. I was like a neutered cat." His affection for the East Bronx of his childhood is clear, and he turns it into a mythic place ("It began to feel like some angel was protecting the gang; each one of us had an angel on his shoulder..."). Despite a disclaimer at the end, though ("certain characters, places, and incidents portrayed in the book are the product of imaginative re-creation"), the book sometimes strains credulity, and the characters occasionally feel too alike. Still, there is no denying Charyn's storytelling abilities, and readers of the trilogy's first two volumes will enjoy this third dose of Bronx lore.

From Library Journal

This is the third memoir by Charyn, author of more than 30 books, including the Isaac Sidel crime series. The other memoirs are The Dark Lady from Belorusse and The Black Swan. The narrator is Baby Charyn, an unsupervised adolescent in the 1940s Bronx. The young tough, who had never left the borough, appears magically in one neighborhood or another without so much as boarding a trolley car, bus, or subway. Written in the tabloid prose of the Sidel genre, it is a similarly adolescent boy's fantasy depicting one-dimensional characters. Women here are sexually available and find Baby irresistible. Men fall under his mother's spell. The story lacks some context and depth and at times gets facts wrong or distorts them. Charyn misnames a borough president and a Bronx hospital and mentions a juvenile detention center that did not yet exist. He also omits a significant Jewish perspective. One neighborhood boy spent years in a refugee camp, writes Charyn, but where and why is unexplained. Faigele, Charyn's Eastern European mother, a celebrated card dealer, spoke Russian, he writes. In reality, however, she more likely conversed in Yiddish with the other Bronx Jews. Recommended for Charyn fans. Elaine Machleder, Bronx, New York
Copyright 2002 Reed Business Information, Inc.

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 192 pages
  • Publisher: Thomas Dunne Books; First Edition edition (April 11, 2002)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0312278101
  • ISBN-13: 978-0312278106
  • Product Dimensions: 8.6 x 5.7 x 0.7 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 9.6 ounces
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,962,832 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
We were the Bronx Boys, a gang that cut across racial and religious lines because we belonged to the democracy of a candy store. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
bas mitzvah girl, war counselor, youth squad, fur king, zip gun, soda jerk, blue feather
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Crotona Park, Hermann Ridder, Addie Vallin, Basil Roth, Sarah Dove, Simpson Street, Smooth Malone, Little Saul, Concourse Plaza, Herm Bartel, Tully Holland, Will's Papoose, Anita Russkoff, Fox Street, Benedict Arnold, Boston Road, Meyer Lansky, Nita Brown, Adam Fink, Baby Charyn, Charlotte Street, Lulu Meyers, Sergeant Sam, Eric Fish, Vladimir Roth
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