This is storytelling as anxiety dream, a bruising conflagration where best-laid plans meet worst-case scenarios again and again. Thankfully, it’s also a great, galloping read, pointed and provocative; the kind of book you might call a good bad time ... Dimechkie, a nimble social satirist and crack observer of the masks that people wear, is cutting but not unkind to his polyglot cast of characters ... The culmination comes in the final pages of the novel, which introduce a neat, startling twist, though its sleight of hand also bears the sticky fingerprints of authorial intent.
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