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The night always comes : a novel / Willy Vlautin.

By: Vlautin, Willy [author.].
Material type: TextTextPublisher: New York City : Harper, [2021]Description: 208 pages ; 22 cm.Content type: text Media type: unmediated Carrier type: volumeISBN: 9780063035089; 0063035081.Subject(s): House buying -- Fiction | Gentrification -- Fiction | Mothers and daughters -- Fiction | Working poor -- Fiction | FICTION / Literary | FICTION / Crime | FICTION / Women | Gentrification | House buying | Mothers and daughters | Working poor | Portland (Or.) -- Fiction | Oregon -- PortlandGenre/Form: Fiction. | Thrillers (Fiction) | Thrillers (Fiction)Additional physical formats: Online version:: The night always comesSummary: "From author Willy Vlautin comes an exploration of greed and opportunism, set amidst a rapidly gentrifying city--a novel taking place over 48 hours in which a young woman must push herself to her limits to get the security she needs for herself and her family"--
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Holdings
Item type Current library Collection Shelving location Call number Status Date due Barcode Item holds
Book Book Bellmawr Fiction Adult F Vla (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 05000009779021
Book Book Voorhees Fiction Adult F Vla (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Checked out 05/10/2024 05000009779039
Total holds: 0

Enhanced descriptions from Syndetics:

"Willy Vlautin is not known for happy endings, but there's something here that defies the downward pull. In the end, Lynette is pure life force: fierce and canny and blazing through a city that no longer has space for her, and it's all Portland's loss."--Portland Monthly Magazine

Award-winning author Willy Vlautin explores the impact of trickle-down greed and opportunism of gentrification on ordinary lives in this scorching novel that captures the plight of a young woman pushed to the edge as she fights to secure a stable future for herself and her family.

Barely thirty, Lynette is exhausted. Saddled with bad credit and juggling multiple jobs, some illegally, she's been diligently working to buy the house she lives in with her mother and developmentally disabled brother Kenny. Portland's housing prices have nearly quadrupled in fifteen years, and the owner is giving them a good deal. Lynette knows it's their last best chance to own their own home--and obtain the security they've never had. While she has enough for the down payment, she needs her mother to cover the rest of the asking price. But a week before they're set to sign the loan papers, her mother gets cold feet and reneges on her promise, pushing Lynette to her limits to find the money they need.

Set over two days and two nights, The Night Always Comes follows Lynette's frantic search--an odyssey of hope and anguish that will bring her face to face with greedy rich men and ambitious hustlers, those benefiting and those left behind by a city in the throes of a transformative boom. As her desperation builds and her pleas for help go unanswered, Lynette makes a dangerous choice that sets her on a precarious, frenzied spiral. In trying to save her family's future, she is plunged into the darkness of her past, and forced to confront the reality of her life.

A heart wrenching portrait of a woman hungry for security and a home in a rapidly changing city, The Night Always Comes raises the difficult questions we are often too afraid to ask ourselves: What is the price of gentrification, and how far are we really prepared to go to achieve the American Dream? Is the American dream even attainable for those living at the edges? Or for too many of us, is it only a hollow promise?

"From author Willy Vlautin comes an exploration of greed and opportunism, set amidst a rapidly gentrifying city--a novel taking place over 48 hours in which a young woman must push herself to her limits to get the security she needs for herself and her family"--

Reviews provided by Syndetics

Library Journal Review

Set in contemporary Portland, OR, this latest by Vlautin (Don't Skip Out on Me) is filled with darkness. Lynette has scrimped for three years to save enough money for the down payment on the house she shares with her mentally impaired older brother and her hard-drinking, chain-smoking mother. Now, just when Lynette's plan is about to pay off, her mother tosses in a huge monkey wrench, forcing Lynette into the night and a series of life-threatening situations with the sketchiest characters imaginable. Her overnight odyssey brings her face-to-face not only with scummy people but also with a past not overfilled with happiness. This fairly short novel is structured in one continuous 48-hour flow, which makes it seem even shorter. The story resonates, with characters we come to feel we know and dialog that is so natural we hear it, not just read it. Lynette may be, as her mother says, "just born to fail." But in spite of everything that has gone wrong for her, in the end she is not defeated. Though alone in the world by story's end, she departs home without bitterness, heading east toward the rising sun. VERDICT This is literary art that will keep readers in their seats until the last page.--Michael Russo, Louisiana State Univ., Baton Rouge

Publishers Weekly Review

Taking a cue from classic noir, Vlautin (Don't Skip Out on Me) offers a stunning, heartbreaking study of one woman's struggle against fate and circumstance in an America that's left her behind. The housing boom in Portland, Ore., has priced many working-class families out, but 30-year-old Lynette's landlord offers her a good deal on the decrepit house she and her mother have been renting for years. Lynette works two jobs while caring for her developmentally disabled brother, Kenny, who also lives with them, and she has finally saved up enough for a down payment. All she needs is her mother to cosign on the loan. At the last minute her mother, exhausted by her own life of struggle and disappointment, backs out of the deal. Desperate, Lynette makes a last-ditch effort to buy the house herself. Along the way, a plot to steal a safe from a friend who owes Lynette money takes her into her dark past of mental illness, sexual abuse, and prostitution, and up against men who prey upon vulnerable women. This gritty page-turner sings with pitch-perfect prose, and Lynette's desperation is palpable. Vlautin has achieved a brilliant synthesis of Raymond Carver and Jim Thompson. Agent: Lesley Thorne, Aitken Alexander Assoc. (Apr.)

Booklist Review

Vlautin's emotionally wrenching tales of the working-class poor typically feature characters trapped in a deadly undertow of economic hardship, compounded by wrong choices made for the right reasons. So it is this time, as Vlautin moves from the country-noir landscape of Don't Skip Out on Me (2018) to the overlooked underclass in gentrifying, superhip Portland, Oregon. Thirty-year-old waitress Lynette has made plenty of wrong choices (drugs, alcohol, and men, among them), but she has remained focused on saving enough money (however ill-gotten) to buy the house where she lives with her mother and developmentally challenged brother. She's close to being there when her mother uses part of the money to buy a car, leaving the kitty short with the owner's deadline approaching. Desperate to make up the difference, Lynette embarks on a two-day rampage into the heart of darkness, culminating with an outlandish scheme to steal a safe. Vlautin never lets us forget that hovering over Lynette's Hail Mary pass at salvation is the spectre of gentrification: "The whole city is starting to haunt me . . . all the new places, the big new buildings, just remind me that I'm nothing, that I'm nobody." Her friend, Shirley, begs to differ: "You never give up and you've got a good heart, a damaged heart, but a good heart." We concur, of course, and race to the end to see if good hearts can maybe, just this once, make a difference. With Vlautin, you never know for sure.

Kirkus Book Review

Need propels a heroine's long night of the soul. Vlautin's fiction is full of working-class strugglers doing their best to survive a rapidly changing country. Most of them, including the protagonists of his propulsive new novel, have been priced out of comfortable living, or even stability. And so they turn to unsavory means to get by. This book plays out like a modern noir take on a Tennessee Williams play, its desperate characters harboring old resentments, its hard-luck heroine settling scores throughout a long, bloody night in her hometown of Portland, Oregon. Thirty-year-old Lynette wants to buy the run-down rental house she shares with her embittered mother and her developmentally challenged brother. But she needs cash, especially after her mom's most recent starburst of irresponsibility. She's owed money around town, and it's time to collect--and then some. Vlautin's supporting characters--meth-heads and pimps, waitresses and mechanics--occupy a rung of society that rarely gets its story told in any kind of convincing way. His language is always vivid. Here's Lynette studying a tweaker: "Bursting red blisters ran from the back of his neck, around his left ear, and completely engulfed his left eye and forehead. He was young, in his twenties, but his teeth had gone bad and his eyes looked pushed into his head like an old man's." Such is the company that Lynette comes to keep in her quest for an instant nest egg. Her nocturnal journey is gripping, but much of the book's power derives from more quotidian questions: Can I get a loan to make that down payment on the house? Can I balance that introduction to econ class with my two jobs? Will my car start? And what happened to my city? "I'm realizing that the whole city is starting to haunt me," Lynette tells a friend. "And all the new places, all the big new buildings, just remind me that I'm nothing, that I'm nobody." Vlautin has written a soulful thriller for the age of soulless gentrification. A working-class drama finds the grit beneath Portland's gentrification. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

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