Review
"Domini is a rare writer who doesn't bend his characters towards his own pre-determined ends, but follows where they lead." -- Jay Cantor
"Domini shows us the way we live...witty, biting portraits of todays men and women...strong sentences...and vivid scenes." -- Alan Cheuse
"Domini's prose is so stark and quick, it's as if a stroke of lightning burned the words into print." -- Janice Daugharty
"Fiery, crackling prose...a double-bladed humor...fearsomely entertaining and pleasurably dark...unforgettable." -- Diana Abu-Jaber
"[These] stories move swiftly and sinuously, emerging from the everyday to coil around a reader's heart." -- Floyd Skyloot
In Domini's novella ... and in most of the other stories, he postures to no apparent end; in terms of narrative, it seems, he has more to prove than to give. -- The New York Times Book Review, Norah Vincent
The reader will wonder at times at how the author can get inside the heads of characters whose backgrounds are so different from his own.... It's sometimes called giving blood, this kind of stand-up writing, and it's the juice that fuels "Highway Trade". -- The Oregonian July 5, 1998
"Domini shows us the way we live...witty, biting portraits of todays men and women...strong sentences...and vivid scenes." -- Alan Cheuse
"Domini's prose is so stark and quick, it's as if a stroke of lightning burned the words into print." -- Janice Daugharty
"Fiery, crackling prose...a double-bladed humor...fearsomely entertaining and pleasurably dark...unforgettable." -- Diana Abu-Jaber
"[These] stories move swiftly and sinuously, emerging from the everyday to coil around a reader's heart." -- Floyd Skyloot
In Domini's novella ... and in most of the other stories, he postures to no apparent end; in terms of narrative, it seems, he has more to prove than to give. -- The New York Times Book Review, Norah Vincent
The reader will wonder at times at how the author can get inside the heads of characters whose backgrounds are so different from his own.... It's sometimes called giving blood, this kind of stand-up writing, and it's the juice that fuels "Highway Trade". -- The Oregonian July 5, 1998

