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Cityside, by Pulitzer Prize nominated author, William
Heffernan is a heartfelt novel. It is just as full of tension,
passion and compassion as it is conspiracy, god-like-ego and
deception. Though it takes place in the mid 1970's, it is clearly a
timeless piece and therefore, shamefully reflective of aspects of
American society in nearly any given decade.
Billy Burke is
a star journalist for an icon New York City newspaper. After a scrap
with a drunken police officer, the paper bails him out of trouble.
His editor, the ruthless Leonard Twist, wants Burke to cover a
story. Burke is sure the story will be lame as a penalty for
jeopardizing the paper's position with the police. His suspicion
could not be any further from the truth.
A disgruntled nurse
shows up at the paper wanting to stir up trouble for her employer,
Dr. Bradford, an arrogant heart surgeon. She explains to the editor
that he and his cohorts are double dipping. The doctors claim to be
working at two places at the same time, collecting checks from
patients and from the state. To top it off, Bradford has no heart of
his own.
Roberto Avalon is a very sick little boy. His heart
has a hole in it. Without undergoing an expensive surgery, he is
sure to die. Dr. Bradford may be an arrogant heart surgeon, but
unfortunately he is also one of the best in the area. However, he
will not perform the operation because Maria Avalon has no medical
insurance. If she can come up with 80% of the 90 grand needed, he
will operate. Working in a sweatshop for peanuts, Maria knows she
can never raise that kind of money. The newspaper is her son's only
hope.
Burke knows better than to get drawn into the personal
element of the story. He needs together facts and report on them. He
and his wife separated years ago. They had a daughter, Annie,
together. But Annie was severely autistic. When they had no choice
but to place her in a home, their marriage fell apart. Guilt eats
away at him. He knows he let his wife down, and it kills him to
think that he let his daughter down as well. This story might one
chance for him to do something good for someone else's child. The
fear that he might fail is a little overwhelming.
Burke's
articles strike a cord within the hearts of the people in the city
and the money pours in. The paper plans to pay for the boy's
surgery, and then expose the crooks for what they really are. The
only trouble is, will Roberto live long enough to undergo the
surgery, a surgery he was prevented from having only because he
belonged to a poor Hispanic family?
Heffernan delves deep
into multiple areas of corruption. Nothing is what it seems. The
characters are so well defined, you feel like you know them. The
scenes are so perfectly plotted that no question goes unanswered.
The story is so moving and infuriating that reading the book is like
climbing into a car on a roller coaster. Hang on tight, and enjoy
the ride. Cityside is a smart, edgy novel.
REVIEWED BY
PHILLIP TOMASSO III
DO NOT REPRINT WITHOUT PERMISSION OF THE AUTHOR, PHILLIP TOMASSO
III
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