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City of Refuge

di Tom Piazza

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24818109,183 (4.07)46
In the heat of late summer, two New Orleans families--one black and one white--confront a storm that will change the course of their lives. SJ Williams, a carpenter and widower, lives and works in the Lower Ninth Ward, the community where he was born and raised. His sister, Lucy, is a soulful mess, and SJ has been trying to keep her son, Wesley, out of trouble. Across town, Craig Donaldson, a Midwestern transplant and the editor of the city's alternative paper, faces deepening cracks in his own family. New Orleans' music and culture have been Craig's passion, but his wife, Alice, has never felt comfortable in the city. The arrival of their two children has inflamed their arguments about the wisdom of raising a family there. When the news comes of a gathering hurricane--named Katrina--the two families make their own very different plans to weather the storm. The Donaldsons join the long evacuation convoy north, across Lake Pontchartrain and out of the city. SJ boards up his windows and brings Lucy to his house, where they wait it out together, while Wesley stays with a friend in another part of town. But the long night of wind and rain is only the beginning--and when the levees give way and the flood waters come, the fate of each family changes forever. The Williamses are scattered--first to the Convention Center and the sweltering Superdome, and then far beyond city and state lines, where they struggle to reconnect with one another. The Donaldsons, stranded and anxious themselves, find shelter first in Mississippi, then in Chicago, as Craig faces an impossible choice between the city he loves and the family he had hoped to raise there. Ranging from the lush neighborhoods of New Orleans to Texas, Missouri, Chicago, and beyond, City of Refuge is a modern masterpiece--a panoramic novel of family and community, trial and resilience, told with passion, wisdom, and a deep understanding of American life in our time.… (altro)
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"But what fiction does that no other genre can do is provide a kind of coordination, or mediation, between characters' most internal experience and their lives as members of a community" - Tom Piazza

A book about something as intensely devastating as Hurricane Katrina seems like it could only be written by Tom Piazza: A New Orleans resident who had already been writing about New Orleans before the catastrophe. Someone who is accustomed to writing non-fiction, who has that focus to write about what happened while also fully fleshing these characters into real people. Hurricane Katrina was that horrendous combination of natural disaster plus man-made mistakes, yet Piazza does a fantastic job focusing on the characters. The sheer amount of the people that were displaced from their homes is surprising to me all these years later. All of us watched the news while Katrina was happening, but less so after... when so many were living in Houston, Chicago, so many places far from home.... The cameras couldn't follow ALL of these displaced families. Piazza does a great job of covering before, during, after: following one black family, one white. One family who flees New Orleans, one family that stays. Essential New Orleans reading. A worthy second placer in The Morning News Tournament of Books: https://themorningnews.org/tob/2009/ ( )
  booklove2 | Jan 18, 2020 |
The story of two different families before, during, and after the Katrina landfall in New Orleans in 2005. The whole meshugene mess of this hurricane is inherently tragic, so it shouldn't be hard to write a moving story about it, but more difficult to make it sound "real." Piazza manages to do so, at least in part. I absolutely loved some parts of this novel, but other parts were close to humdrum. The story leading up to and through the hurricane are strong and heartfelt and, on more than one occasion, I had to put the book down to wipe away my tears. The latter part is not as engaging, unfortunately, and the punch had been bigger had the editor been somewhat more aggressive with his redline pen. Also, Piazza is strangely removed from his characters and some of them fall much too close to caricature than is comfortable. Still, I think this qualifies as a "should-read" for anyone who wants to know what happened on the ground during that horrific week in NOLA history (and beyond). ( )
  -Eva- | Jan 26, 2018 |
This book grew on me and by the end I was in tears. I lived in New Orleans for 16 years (prior to Katrina) and some very dear friends lost all possessions in the floods, so the impact of the story line was very heavy for me. I grew to love the 2 families and soon became immersed.
It was like reading of friends and family and places that are so familiar that I couldn't stop reading.

I continue to think about these characters and their lives. Yes, the book was not perfect, but it sent me to a place of deep emotion and will be remembered along with Zeitoun and Nine Lives and 5 Days at Memorial as the best of post Katrina reading for me. ( )
  njinthesun | Jul 6, 2017 |
As a New Orleanian, I would've given this novel five stars, however I am also a writer. I loved everything about these two stories and forgave the problems that others might point out, such as; telling instead of showing. I think he held the reader's hand as it went along instead of trusting the writing. I dig how much he loves NOLA, but he kind of beats you over the head with it. Naming all the streets and places and music that others don't know is kind of like hearing the teachers in a Charlie Brown cartoon. Would I recommend it? Yes, I would...to everyone. It still drives to the heart of two family's experiences during the storm. You feel the pain and heartbreak and that makes this novel a success. ( )
  EJFin | Apr 6, 2016 |
Tom Piazza riffs like a jazz musician in his novel City of Refuge, mixing angry and discordant phrases with smooth and harmonious ones. Underneath the ebb and flow of these melodies, his themes of home and identity pulse like a heartbeat.

The book examines the lives of two New Orleans families in the days before and after Hurricane Katrina. SJ Williams lives in the doomed Lower Ninth Ward with his sister and nephew; Craig Donaldson and his family live in a middle class enclave across town. With the deadly storm bearing down, the Donaldson’s decamp the city while SJ and his relatives hunker down. Everything changes when the levees break and baptize the city in grimy, unholy water. SJ’s family is torn apart, packed and shipped to opposite ends of the country, while Craig’s family escapes to Chicago, together. Emptiness and confusion plague Craig and SJ as they try to patch together a life separate from New Orleans, each worried that their identities will disintegrate like the city they long for.

With stark and brutal language, Piazza filters the tragedy of Katrina through the prism of Craig and SJ’s struggles to define their lives. The characters are so familiar that the reader must ponder the same questions of home and identity. True to the jazz feel of the book, though, Piazza creates a wide range of experiences in his characters. They strike out in every direction like solo improvisations on a theme. In the end, there is room for everyone, refuge for all in this tune.

4 bones!!!! ( )
  blackdogbooks | May 14, 2014 |
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Can you live without the willow tree? Well, no, you can't. The willow tree is you. The pain on the mattress there - that dreadful pain - that's you.
- John Steinbeck, The Grapes of Wrath

Pilate saith unto him, What is truth?
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Parade coming. Could be any Sunday, just about, especially in the fall. People on the steps of shotgun houses, shoulder to shoulder on the sidewalk, watching everyone passing by, ice chest just inside the door full of beer and wine coolers and lemonade, people all out on the grassy neutral groung cooking up food - SJ, too, with his converted oil drum.
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The speech patterns in certain New Orleans neighborhoods approach the complexity of Chinese in the shades of meaning that can be extracted from the tiniest gradations of inflection and timing. Sometimes these gradations can mean the difference between life and death.
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In the heat of late summer, two New Orleans families--one black and one white--confront a storm that will change the course of their lives. SJ Williams, a carpenter and widower, lives and works in the Lower Ninth Ward, the community where he was born and raised. His sister, Lucy, is a soulful mess, and SJ has been trying to keep her son, Wesley, out of trouble. Across town, Craig Donaldson, a Midwestern transplant and the editor of the city's alternative paper, faces deepening cracks in his own family. New Orleans' music and culture have been Craig's passion, but his wife, Alice, has never felt comfortable in the city. The arrival of their two children has inflamed their arguments about the wisdom of raising a family there. When the news comes of a gathering hurricane--named Katrina--the two families make their own very different plans to weather the storm. The Donaldsons join the long evacuation convoy north, across Lake Pontchartrain and out of the city. SJ boards up his windows and brings Lucy to his house, where they wait it out together, while Wesley stays with a friend in another part of town. But the long night of wind and rain is only the beginning--and when the levees give way and the flood waters come, the fate of each family changes forever. The Williamses are scattered--first to the Convention Center and the sweltering Superdome, and then far beyond city and state lines, where they struggle to reconnect with one another. The Donaldsons, stranded and anxious themselves, find shelter first in Mississippi, then in Chicago, as Craig faces an impossible choice between the city he loves and the family he had hoped to raise there. Ranging from the lush neighborhoods of New Orleans to Texas, Missouri, Chicago, and beyond, City of Refuge is a modern masterpiece--a panoramic novel of family and community, trial and resilience, told with passion, wisdom, and a deep understanding of American life in our time.

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