Everyday People

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Authors: Stewart O'Nan

BOOK: Everyday People
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Critical Acclaim for
Everyday People:

“Stewart O'Nan is not concerned with having you know what every word in his narrative signifies at the moment you read it so much as assuring that if you follow the rhythm and pull of his jazz-inflected virtuoso linguistic performance, you will come away touched, maybe even changed… . Like a rendition of John Coltrane's ‘A Few of My Favorite Things,'
Everyday People
is dynamic, out there and operating at a frequency that has you feeling things at the most unexpected of moments… . A complex and moving exploration of the depth of sadness and the shape of ordinary despair.”

—Manuel Luis Martinez,
Chicago Tribune

“The dreams of everyday people, those who burden and carry one another through the day, are sandblasted away like graffiti. O'Nan's novel is bent on reclaiming them… . While most white writers would shy away from this territory for fear of getting it wrong, O'Nan risks it all. As a result, the people of East Liberty, even the minor characters, have a remarkable dignity and singularity… . Heartbreaking.”

—Scott Blackwood,
The Austin Chronicle

“Accomplished and satisfying … Beautiful … The seed of the community in this novel is the family, with all its rough edges and broken branches. Beyond the family orbit are friends and other neighborhoods and political decisions that ignore need and history … [as] written by O'Nan, whose ear is low, low to the ground.”

—Susan Salter Reynolds,
Los Angeles Times


Everyday People
is lit with dim but inextinguishable rays of hope… . O'Nan's dry-eyed, matter-of-fact rendition of the high prices they pay highlights their heroism.”

—Tess Lewis,
The Baltimore Sun


Everyday People
is [O'Nan's] latest in a long line of surprises, an unusually constructed piece full of unflinching insight… . It's a wonderful experience for any reader who relishes a subtle challenge wrapped in rhythmic prose.”

—Robin Vidimos,
The Denver Post

“Stewart O'Nan [is] surely the novelist of his generation most capable of ushering readers into a world that, like their own, is one they won't want to leave, no matter how its joys collapse and die and its terrors loom… . O'Nan draws [his characters] with such skill that they become people we know better than the people we really know. We know them even better than we'll ever know ourselves in fact, and that is precisely what makes O'Nan's every sentence so resonant, his every novel so good.”

—David Kirby,
The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“Stirring, richly imagined … Like Sherwood Anderson's
Winesburg, Ohio
or Gloria Naylor's
The Women of Brewster Place
,
Everyday People
weaves its tale elliptically, through the vignettes that evoke the nuances of East Liberty… . [With] crisp storytelling, O'Nan creates vivid interior worlds, evoking conflicts and joys with astonishing grace and agility.”

—John Freeman,
The Milwaukee Journal-Sentinel

“A deeply satisfying book … O'Nan's prose is supple and generous, bending to accommodate his characters as one by one they describe, in their own voices, what it is to be a father, an invalid, a waitress, a teenager consumed with bloodlust, an unrepentant killer. What we are left with is a compelling document of the dangers and mercies of being human.”

—Amy Benfer,
Salon

“Stewart O'Nan has an empathy factor that at times feels almost eerie… . O'Nan travels among [the characters] with the deftness of a medium, penetrating with equal ease the minds of eighteen-year-old hip-hoppers, former or would-be gang-bangers, and heartsick grandmothers. His precise use of language makes scenes materialize vividly.”

—Tananarive Due,
The Miami Herald

“Vivid, thoughtful …
Everyday People
is an engaging picture of the lives of the working poor—with plenty of soul and no easy answers. It speaks poignantly of the ‘endless series of tiny self-denials chipping away at the heart,' a fix more deadly than street drugs.”

—Judith Wynn,
The Boston Herald

“Stewart O'Nan's emotional novel depicts a community and its people in gritty, poetic prose.”

—Lee Milazzo,
The Dallas Morning News

“Voice after voice, novel after novel, Stewart O'Nan crafts some of the finest fiction in America—and some of the most fascinating… . A fine book—one that takes you inside East Liberty and inside its characters' lives and minds in a way that few novels are able to do. Because those lives so often and convincingly merge and cross, O'Nan creates a living, breathing community out of mere words.”

—Larry Johnson,
Iowa City Gazette

“A complex picture of a community and a clan intricately linked to each other yet cut off from the world at large … [O'Nan's] tender, unjudgmental portrayals and his command of slang and popular culture prevent his characters' lives from devolving into the mere ‘pat tragedies in blackface.' … Instead, the novel reveals a group of quietly heroic everyday people.”

—Michael Connery,
Time Out New York

“The title promises lyrical social realism, and the novel delivers, weaving gritty street rhythms with a Faulknerian flow… . Fashioned with poignancy and deep compassion.”

—Troy Patterson,
Entertainment Weekly

“Quietly passionate, imbued with a subtle understanding of how the personal and political intertwine; another fine effort from an always-intriguing writer.”

—
Kirkus Reviews

“The protean O'Nan seems determined to touch nearly every facet of human experience in a remarkable variety of times and places… . O'Nan's empathy for his characters conveys their sense of frustration and powerlessness, the restlessness of teenagers and the older generations stoic dignity.”

—
Publishers Weekly

“A tough, bold, expertly tender, beautiful novel.
Everyday People
takes us deeply into its singular characters and treats them with respect. Stewart O'Nan is a wise, powerful writer.”

—Joanna Scott

Also by the author

FICTION
Wish You Were Here
A Prayer for the Dying
A World Away
The Speed Queen
The Names of the Dead
Snow Angels
In the Walled City

NONFICTION
The Circus Fire

AS EDITOR
The Vietnam Reader
On Writers and Writing, by John Gardner

EVERYDAY PEOPLE

STEWART O'NAN

For John Edgar Wideman

Copyright © 2001 by Stewart O'Nan

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer, who may quote brief passages in a review. Any members of educational institutions wishing to photocopy part or all of the work for classroom use, or publishers who would like to obtain permission to include the work in an anthology, should send their inquiries to Grove/Atlantic, Inc., 841 Broadway, New York, NY 10003.

“Good Morning, Heartache” appeared in slightly different form in
Glimmertrain
.

Published simultaneously in Canada
Printed in the United States of America

FIRST PAPERBACK EDITION

Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data

O'Nan, Stewart, 1961–

Everyday people / Stewart O'Nan.

p. cm.

eBook ISBN-13: 978-1-5558-4790-6

1. East Liberty (Pittsburgh, Pa.)—Fiction. 2. Afro-American neighborhoods
—Fiction. 3. Afro-American teenage boys—Fiction. 4. Accident victims—
Fiction. 5. Pittsburgh (Pa.)—Fiction. 6. Afro-Americans—Fiction. 7. Paralytics—Fiction. I. Title.
PS3565.N316 E94 2001
813'.54—dc21                                                                                00-049052

Design by Laura Hammond Hough

Grove Press
841 Broadway
New York, NY 10003

02 03 04 05    10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1

There is the sorrow of blackmen
Lost in cities. But who can conceive
Of cities lost in a blackman?

RAYMOND PATTERSON

Love me
love me love me
say you do.

NINA SIMONE

INBOUND

EAST LIBERTY DOESN'T
need the Martin Robinson Express Busway. It's for the commuters who come in every day from Penn Hills and sit in front, hiding behind their
Post-Gazette
s, their briefcases balanced across their knees. When you get on, their eyes brush up against you, then dart off like scared little fish. They might notice your suit is just as fine as theirs—probably even more styling—but then they look away, and you aren't there anymore. No one saying a mumbling word. Seats all taken like they got on in twos, driver switched them in like a herd of turkeys can't think a lick for themselves. Goddamn. 1998, and you're back in the back of the bus, seats underneath you hot from the big diesel, lump of nasty duct tape grabbing at your slacks.

What East Liberty wanted was a new community center with a clinic. The old one's small and falling apart and just lost its funding. What we need is a good clean place to take the babies, some after-school programs for the young people. But that got voted down in city council. The ballots
fell by color lines, paper said—not a surprise, especially the way they said it. A Black thing, all your fault, like you were asking for something no one else has. It was predictable, that's the sad thing; even the good Jewish liberals in Squirrel Hill are pinching their pennies these days. Taxes this and welfare that, like they gonna starve or something. Let's not even talk about them simple crackers out past that.

There still had to be some way to get some money into the community. That must have been what Martin Robinson was thinking. You voted for him—have your whole life—so who are you supposed to blame? And the money would come in. Half the contracts were supposed to go to local businesses, and Martin made sure that happened. That's the good news.

The bad news is that the Martin Robinson Express Busway basically stops all traffic—white and black and otherwise—from coming through the business district. The way the city council and their planners drew up the project, the busway effectively cuts East Liberty off from the rest of Pittsburgh. State money but they made a deal, took his own bill out of Martin's hands. Two busy bridges had to go (crowds gathered to count down the perfect explosions), and South Highland had to be rerouted around the business district (meaning the dead Sears there, you understand). So if you ever wanted whitefolks to leave you alone, you ought to be happy now.

Probably would be if it wasn't for the money. And the services too, you know. It'll take that much longer for an ambulance to get over here, and you think that's a mistake?
Fire engine, police when you need them, gas and electric in winter.

And then they name the thing after him. Good man, Martin Robinson, not one of those sorry-ass Al Sharpton, greasy-hair-wearing, no 'count jackleg preachers with five Cadillacs and ten rings on his fingers and twenty lawyers playing games. Martin's got thirty years in the state house, might be the best man to come out of East Liberty, definitely the one who's done the most for the people. Come up on Spofford, regular people, raised right. You ask Miss Fisk, she'll tell you. Old Mayor Barr who called out the Guard on us in '67, he got a tunnel named after him, and Dick Caligiuri, the poor man who died of that terrible disease, he got the county courthouse. Martin Robinson deserves the new stadium, or maybe that community center we need, something positive, not some raggedy-ass busway. It's plain disrespectful.

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