In this issue

Football Preview
All you need to know about the Saints, LSU, and Tulane

Interview with Les Miles

Interview with Scott Fujita

Satchmo Summer Fest
Artist previews from the music festival that honors Louis Armstrong

One To Watch
Shamarr Allen

Food News
Food and Dining Happenings

Frozen Drinks
Summer Breezes Summer Freezes

Po-Boy Views
Smart Cocktails With The Boys or Socks In The City

Tales From The Quarter
Tales Beyond The Quarter

Jogging
If the Shoe Fits, Run With It

Local Book Reviews
The Eleventh Commandment by Dean Shapiro

Local Book Reviews
Lush Life by Richard Price

Local Book Reviews
In The Land Of Cocktails by Ti Adelaide Martin & Lally Brennan

CD Reviews

Movie Reviews

Art Nights Out
White, Dirty, and Off-White Linen

Lakeside to Riverside
Shows To See This August

A Taste of New Orleans
Hubigs Pies

HD Gathering
the gathering of the minds that are going to blow minds


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Local Book Reviews

Lush Life by Richard Price

By Fritz Esker


Lush Life
By Richard Price
Farrar, Straus & Giroux
Reviewed by Fritz Esker

Lush Life takes place in New York’s Lower East Side, where struggling young artists and trendy clubs reside next to poverty-stricken housing projects. One night, a young bartender is killed in an apparent robbery gone wrong. However, the cops suspect that the victim’s co-worker (who was with him during the shooting) is lying about something.
The first 100 pages of Lush Life is a mystery, similar to Price’s earlier novels (Clockers, Freedomland) where a seemingly cut-and-dry case has more to it than meets the eye. However, any mystery about who did it and why is resolved less than a third of the way through the novel. What Lush Life is really about is the effects an act of violence has on the victim’s family, the bystanders, the cops, the killer, and the community itself.
And this is what makes Price special as a novelist (he’s also an accomplished screenwriter and he was a writer on HBO’s landmark series The Wire). Make no mistake about it, he tells a good story with a well-thought out plot, but his stories are always inhabited by three-dimensional, fully fleshed-out characters that elevate his work over average genre novels.
Price isn’t a prolific novelist (his last novel, the excellent Samaritan, was released in early 2003), but his novels are always worth the wait.

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