Going to Chicago
A Novel
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- $7.99
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- $7.99
Publisher Description
There’s real despair in Bennett’s Corners, Ohio. It’s 1934, and The Great Depression is dragging on. That’s not to say young people don’t have their big burning ambitions, their uncontrollable urges. They do.
Will Randall’s dream is to go to the Chicago World’s Fair, to see the technological wonders of the modern age and to prepare himself for the glorious future sure to erupt once FDR gets a handle on things. Ace Gilbert had a different dream. He wants to find a “willing city girl”.
So, on a scorching August day these two very-best-of-friends set out for Chicago in Ace’s old Model T, which has been transformed with wings and a propeller to look like the Spad SXIII his father flew in The Great War. This is going to be the best week of their lives, even if Will’s little brother—and his ear-ache—have to come along.
Driving across the Indiana cornfields, they’re kidnapped by a pair of penny candy criminals, Gus Gillis and Gladys Batholomew, and thus begins an adventure none of them had bargained for.
At times, Aces’s narrative is wickedly funny, at other times tearful. And sometimes, his bewilderment comes to full boil.
Going to Chicago is much more than a period romp across the American heartland. It’s a journey into friendship—a friendship bigger than death.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
The first three quarters of Levandoski's nostalgic coming-of-age debut are a charming, funny take on many of the same themes that made A Prairie Home Companion popular, but the disjointed tragic ending that ruins the journey of three high-school youths to the 1934 Chicago World's Fair is a disappointment. First-person narrator Ace Gilbert and his buddies Will and Clyde Randall are a trio of Ohio farm boys whose families are struggling through the Depression. The dream of their young lives comes true when they're given permission to take a trip to the big city for an up-close glimpse of the "technology of the future," not to mention some fast Chicago women. Then reality--of a sort--intrudes on adolescent fantasy when Gus Gillis and Gladys Bartholomew, a wannabe Bonnie-and-Clyde couple, kidnap the boys and hijack their vehicle for an ill-advised robbing spree fraught with romantic overtones. By the time Gus and Gladys force a confrontation with the law, Levandoski has let his novel migrate into Quentin Tarantino country. In the meantime, however, he draws several memorable characters, and his attention to voice and expository minutiae pays off throughout, especially in the authentic period details and graceful country humor of the early chapters. It is unfortunate that he never quite manages to reconcile the conflict between humor and darkness that haunts this otherwise engaging tale.