From Booklist
A family from Minneapolis relocates to New Orleans one year before Katrina and settles on Orchard Street, partly because it offers a rich human gumbo of whites, blacks, Asians, and Tulane students. The family members want to revel in the diversity, but they also recoil at some of the differences they encounter. At the same time, the marital stresses between husband and wife are deepening. Babylon Rolling is a chronicle of life on Orchard Street during that year before disaster. It is an engaging and keenly observant book, a kind of literary block party in which the residents of Orchard Street come to life. Whether Boyden’s focus is on a black teenager who embarks on a career in the drug trade by dubbing himself Fearius, or on the Minnesota transplants’ reactions to their new home, or on the fierce heat and humidity, or the wondrous smells that waft from kitchens, or racial tensions, there is an honesty and bedrock reality to this novel that is never less than compelling. Boyden’s Pretty Little Dirty (2006) was a first novel of promise. Babylon Rolling fulfills that promise. --Thomas Gaughan
Review
ACCLAIM FOR AMANDA BOYDEN
BABYLON ROLLING-Set in the chaotic months surrounding a treacherous hurricane, Boyden-s second novel is an adroit, compulsively readable study of a city and the shared humanity that unites its diverse inhabitants.-
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People, four out of four stars
-Once in a great while, a novel comes along that makes you sit up and look around at your world and see it anew, in all its richness and complexity, as if you had just arrived there from a great distance. Amanda Boyden's second novel,
Babylon Rolling, does that for New Orleans-. She surprises at every turn, seizing upon the way violence -- and joy -- can erupt in a moment.
Babylon Rolling is many books in one -- a brilliant, nuanced portrait of pre-Katrina New Orleans; a passionate defense of the city; a clear-eyed critique of the problems that remain. Gracefully weaving together strands of race relations, food, music and Mardi Gras (-Babylon rolls at 5:45, the paper said, Chaos at 6-), Boyden shoots right to the heart of a fabulous, flawed city. Her aim is true. In
Babylon Rolling, as in life, New Orleanians stand and fall together, rescue one another and, in doing so, themselves.-
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Times-Picayune (New Orleans)
-Complex and compelling.... Boyden has so fully and generously imagined Orchid Street and its inhabitants. Her writing acknowledges the depth of race and class divisions... but she-s also aware of the ways people break out of their assigned roles.... From the stutter steps her characters take toward and away from one another, Boyden creates an engrossing dance.... The five story lines build into a terrifically vivid portrait of a city and its people.- -
San Francisco Chronicle -Few contemporary novels are, at their root, as compelling about the relationship between a city and the...
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