Born In Boston
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- $95.00
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- $95.00
Descripción editorial
Born in Boston is a literary coming-of-age novel about how a city shapes a person long before they understand they are being shaped.
Told in a reflective first-person voice, the novel follows a fictional narrator born in 1959 and raised in working-class Boston during the 1960s and 1970s—a city defined by pressure, loyalty, silence, and unspoken rules. Childhood unfolds in triple-deckers, alleys, schools, and winters that teach endurance early. Adolescence brings sharper lessons: how power moves quietly, how reputation precedes choice, and how survival often depends on restraint rather than force.
As the narrator grows, Boston becomes more than a backdrop—it is a formative force. The city teaches vigilance, consequence, and emotional economy, shaping instincts that remain long after the narrator leaves. Distance from the city allows perspective, and perspective allows integration. What once felt like constant pressure gradually becomes a set of internal tools: awareness without fear, strength without aggression, steadiness without urgency.
The novel traces this arc from formation to departure to quiet adulthood, where life no longer demands defense and identity no longer requires explanation. There is no dramatic escape or triumph—only the earned calm of someone who has learned what to carry forward and what to set down.
Born in Boston is not nostalgia, confession, or indictment. It is an examination of place, pressure, and identity—and the quiet victory of becoming whole after a loud beginning.
This is the first book in a series exploring different fictional lives shaped by different cities, each rooted in realism, atmosphere, and internal reckoning.