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Revolutionaries by Joshua Furst
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Revolutionaries

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Revolutionaries by Joshua Furst
Paperback $17.00
Mar 10, 2020 | ISBN 9780307456144

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  • $17.00

    Mar 10, 2020 | ISBN 9780307456144

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  • Apr 16, 2019 | ISBN 9780525655343

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Praise

“Deeply felt and often beautiful . . . Furst’s richly researched and detailed book gives us a vivid portrait of the Lower East Side in the ’60s and ’70s from the perspective of a radical milieu, but also from a child’s eye, street-level view…a chaotic, ramshackle place . . . Revolutionaries examines the [period] from every angle, orbiting the evidence and arguments . . .The novel’s ultimate beauty—like its characters’—is spiritual.  It refuses to sanctify or condemn anyone.” — The New York Times Book Review

“Furst vividly depicts figures from the [the sixties and seventies] . . . [and Revolutionaries] knows . . . how to turn down the political and historical volume to let a reader see instead of just hear.” —The New Yorker

“A masterpiece of narrative voice that wonders at the little regarded casualties of a life with a national profile.”—The Forward

“Furst paints a mesmerizingly vivid and ultimately heartbreaking portrait of the Lower East Side of New York City in the ’60s and early ’70s, an era of revolution that, in the novel’s simultaneously expansive and intimate bird’s-eye view, sparks with a tangibly raucous energy, before giving way to the dark, tragic withering-away that followed.” —The San Francisco Chronicle

 
Revolutionaries is overflowing, hyper, passionate, raunchy, forceful, and over the top—just like its subject, the fictitious sixties radical Lenny Snyder.”—New York Journal of Books

“A warts-and-all look at the 1960s counterculture through the eyes of Freedom “Fred” Snyder, the child of an Abbie Hoffman-like activist leader. . . . Furst upends our often nostalgic, peace-and-love view of the Sixties [and is] particularly adept at painting a visceral picture of Freedom’s surroundings, using the observational gifts of a child.”—Library Journal

“. . . rich material . . . Furst offers an honest look at what’s been won, and lost . . . [the novel] picks up steam as [Freedom] gains an increasingly realistic understanding of the cards he’s been dealt.” —Splice Today


“A grown-up child of the 1960s looks back in anger, seasoned with retroactive awe, at his mercurial father, a legendary activist and counterculture icon. . . . A haunting vision of post-‘60s malaise whose narrator somehow retains his humor, compassion, and even optimism in the wake of the most crushing disillusionment.”—Kirkus (starred)
 
“A heartfelt meditation on how quickly history outruns political and social ideals. . . . Furst’s novel and its themes will resonate with readers regardless of whether they lived through its time.”—Publishers Weekly (starred)
 
Revolutionaries is an express train of a novel, and through its windows we are offered an extraordinary view of America’s ruination. At once comic and tragic and domestic and panoramic, this a wonderful, masterful novel.”—Joseph O’Neill, author of The Dog and Netherland
 
“The best portrayal of the charismatic and kinetic politics of the 60s since American Pastoral. Joshua Furst has given us a kaleidoscopic and timely exploration of the personal and political costs of populism—on the left or the right.”—David Cole, national legal director, ACLU, and author of Engines of Liberty: How Citizen Movements Succeed
 
 “A gorgeously written elegy for American subversion that will make you want to shout in the street, and a heartbreaking family story that’ll have you weeping as you do it.”—James Hannaham, author of Delicious Foods and God Says No
 
“A triumph of narration—sly, fierce, funny—and a brilliant take on one of America’s great insurrectionary moments. Freedom Snyder is a narrator to treasure, and Joshua Furst brings a beautiful mix of empathy, longing, scorn and a sense of tragic witness to this novel of politics and family love.”—Sam Lipsyte, author of Hark and The Ask

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