Book Club at the Red Table

 

 

Screen Shot 2016-08-21 at 1.58.11 PMI belong to my daughter’s Book Club. She supplies the good company, calls in the bagel order to Murray’s in Chelsea and sets the table. I sit back, relax and take it all in, curious as to what each member thinks of the particular book chosen that month. It’s a good group—smart, insightful, funny, all different professions sharing the dual passion of friendship and books. It is great for a writer to be in their company. It’s like having your very own focus group—you listen to what they like in a book; what gave them pause; what made them want to continue; and what, if anything, disturbed them.

Last month, for the first time, an author joined the group—Julia Dahl who has recently published a terrific first novel, INVISIBLE CITY. I wasn’t the one who invited her; she came courtesy of another member, Jeff, who works for Julia’s husband. But I am pleased to say I was the one who chose the novel as our monthly read.

From the very start, Julia, cute, charming, gracious, stiletto sense of humor, fit right in with the group. Except for me, they are all around the same age—early 30s. I sat back, sipped my coffee and watched Julia handle their pinpoint questions with ease and confidence. The novel deals with a murder in Brooklyn’s Hasidic community and one determined young reporter’s quest to get to the truth. It is beautifully written, fast-paced, New York City rich dialogue and what is most impressive to me, especially with a first novel, is how quickly a reader is engaged in the story. In less than 20 pages, Dahl has you in her world—the tabloids on one end; the cloistered life of the Ultra-Orthodox on the other; and, in the middle, a young woman grappling to come to terms with a mother who long ago abandoned her.

The atmosphere around the Red Table was relaxed and casual, the questions born of curiosity, the answers delivered in a confident manner. The Red Table Book Club is as interested in the process of how a book is written as much as they are in how well the final version is executed. They asked Julia about her research, about whether she felt threatened by those in the community, about how much her newspaper background helped her in writing the novel. It was a pleasure for me to be a small part of that special Sunday morning.

We hear so much about the death of the written word, about how no one reads anymore and no cares about books. And there is, sadly, proof of that all around us—stores closing by the week, sales decreasing, lists cut back. It is sad enough to walk down certain streets and no longer see the book store I used to haunt, a young man spending money he didn’t have on books he needed to have.

And then I look around the table, at the bright and eager faces of The Red Table Book Club and see them chatting with a young author who has nothing but a brilliant future in front of her and it makes me realize that maybe all that negative talk about the demise of the book can be defeated. That there are many people out there who still love a good story well told and will reach for it in any fashion they can.

There was one other thing about that morning that stayed with me. One of the members of the Red Table Club, Matt, had told me earlier that he had signed with a literary agency. They had agreed to take on the novel he wrote in his free time, when he wasn’t teaching or helping his wife, Phoebe, take care of just about 2-year-old Nate. He was too shy to mention that to Julia so I did.

Her reaction was one of sheer joy. “That’s fantastic,” Julia said. “That is huge. That’s the biggest obstacle. That means they think they can sell it and they will.”

And that’s one of the many things I love about the writing life. How welcoming it is to new members of the fraternity. How eager they are to reach out and help the younger ones following in their path or in the case of Julia and Matt, quick to embrace the newest author in the group.

I saw that and thought back to when I was a teenager and wrote a long letter to Pete Hamill, then a columnist for the New York Post. I remembered how kind he was to me and, later, when he went to the News and I started there as a copy boy how generous he was of his time and his talent. He got as much of a kick helping me as I did absorbing his valuable lessons.

That was my take-away from that morning. A young author, flush with the success of her new book and deep into writing her second, happily sharing a bagel, some coffee, conversation and experience with a group of readers who had, by the end of the meeting, become her friends.

And that is truly what any reader is to an author—a friend.

A very good friend.

 

 

11 thoughts on “Book Club at the Red Table

  1. I’ve sent a number of essay emails to the center of fiction marked private for you thinking you’d receive and read , but called to donate and told they aren’t forwarded to you, as your not there. Respectfully, G. Nagle

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  2. Garrett Nagle

    I called the Center of Fiction and a pedantic individual said in the afternoon your not there anymore and important emails left to you were sent there I need or would wish you’d read them it’s important enough to leave this message twice and mistakenly said I was a writer to get your attention, as being difficult to get in touch with please retrieve those emails respectfully, G. N.

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  3. Garrett Nagle

    Garrett Nagle
    6526 Hoover Circle
    Charlotte N.C. 28214

    SOS: 704-391-8261
    Thank you !
    Forward to Lorenzo Carcaterra please !

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  4. Dear Lorenzo,

    I first read “Apaches” 3/15/2005. I read it the second time in April of 2010.

    I am now reading it for the third time 7/29/2019.

    All I can say is that you are one damn fine writer. Of the coupl’a thousand books I have read over the past 40 of my 70 years……only a few, I can count them on one hand, have rated “EXCELLENT ” This book, and your ability, rates in that rarified atmosphere I occupy as a constant reader.

    You have a gift.

    John C. Boyer
    Goodyear, AZ
    Jboyer18@cox.net

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  5. Diane Labonte Thompson

    My 1st book of yours was Tin Badges, I totally LOVE IT! I will be reading more of your books. I would really like to see more of Tank Rizzo, Pearl & his crew. I read 11 books every 21 days, looking forward to seeing more of Tank & friends. . Thank you, Diane Labonte-Thompson

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    1. John Boyer

      Lorenzo Carcaterra is indeed A Master of the Written Word.

      I am reading a couple of books by Pat Conroy now, but as soon as I’m done, I will be searching for Carcaterra’s works that I have not read yet .

      John Boyer
      Goodyear, AZ

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  6. Toni Whitegrass

    Lorenzo Carcaterra’s books are numbered amongst my favorite reads. “Sleepers” was unforgettable, “Gangster” and now “Three Women” which I just finished. I am an aspiring writer and hope one day to be able to convey the thoughts and spirit he captures in his books. “Sleepers” was real. I know that it is based on someone’s true life experience which made it compelling. I enjoyed the friendships forged and the different life paths that each friend took. Their lives took such different turns and they all dealt with the tragedy in completely different ways. I truly understood the sweetness of revenge in that book. “Gangster” brought tears to my eyes. It also felt like it was based on a true story. Finally I really enjoyed “Three Women”. I loved Lorenzo’s statement that he is at an age where he imagines the end and knows it is coming. That is so true for those of us born in the 50’s knowing that we have endured more tragedy in our many years and happy times too, both in equal measure. I like the working class realism of his books. They are not candy-coated. Thank you Lorenzo Carcaterra for your inspiring works of art.

    Toni Whitegrass
    Tacoma, WA

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    1. John Charles Boyer

      Hi Tony! I was born in ’49 and Lorenzo Carcaterra’s deeply resonated within in me. In my opinion, he was one of the few, not so prolific, but absolutely GIFTED authors of our time. I rate him up with DeMille, Grisham, Camp, Trollope and Chricton.

      He is a jewel in a penny ante morass of wannabe crime writers. He injects his soul into every one of his works.

      The literary world is a far better place because of Lorenzo Carcaterra.

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  7. Gail Glasser

    Dear Mr. Carcaterra, There is an error on p.159 of Nonna Maria and the Missing Bride in hardback. The first word in the 3 rd paragraph has the incorrect name, Pasquale (already dead). The name should be Buonopana. It needs to be corrected in future editions. The book
    is a 20 on my 1-10 scale of wonderful and this 80 year young lady thanks you. Gail Glasser

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