Stone Crown (eBook)

Stone Crown (eBook)

Shawn P.O Allen
Shawn P.O Allen
Prezzo:
€ 4,49
Compra EPUB
Prezzo:
€ 4,49
Compra EPUB

Formato

:
EPUB
Cloud: Scopri di più
Compatibilità: Tutti i dispositivi
Lingua: Inglese
Editore: Allen Publishing House
Codice EAN: 9798235006485
Anno pubblicazione: 2026
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Chiudi

Descrizione

Some men are built for places that don't exist yet. Theron Vast leaves Calder, Vermont on a Tuesday night with two hundred and thirty dollars, three letters in his jacket pocket, and no plan beyond the next hour. The letters are from Clover Maine — detective-track, Boston Police Academy, the woman who has been leaving since she was sixteen and finally did. The last sentence of the last letter isn't finished. He finishes it for her, probably wrong, and gets on the bus anyway. Boston doesn't welcome him. It doesn't need to. The city receives him the way it receives everyone — without ceremony, without judgment — and he gets to work. Day labor. Concrete and formwork. Nineteen dollars an hour in cash from a foreman who respects what he sees in Theron's hands and doesn't ask where he came from. What Theron has — what he has always had, without a name for it — is the ability to walk into a room and hear what's actually being said. To find the thing underneath the stated thing. To understand what a situation needs before the situation knows it needs anything. In Calder, this was just a quality people noticed. In South Boston, it becomes something else entirely. Through a chance encounter on a day labor site, Theron is drawn into the informal economy of Boston's tightest neighborhood — not as muscle, not as threat, but as something rarer: a man who can sit across from two parties who want to kill each other and find the arrangement that makes the killing unnecessary. The work is gray. The ethics are complicated. The outcomes are, more often than not, genuinely better for the streets than the alternative. He tells himself it's temporary. He tells himself he's just finding his footing. He tells himself a lot of things, the way men do when they are becoming something they haven't decided to become yet. Running alongside all of it is Clover. Saturday mornings at a diner in Jamaica Plain. The Arnold Arboretum in April when the trees haven't committed to anything yet. Two people who have known each other long enough to share a silence and who are being very careful, for reasons they both understand, not to say the things that would change what they are. She is building herself into something the academy requires and it takes all of her. He is building something too, though he won't call it that for a long time. Then the federal investigation arrives. And Theron has to reckon — fully, on the record, in a conference room with a federal task force — with what he has built, what it was for, and what it cost. Not just legally. Morally. The question that gets asked of him, the one he has been asking himself for months without admitting it: Is there a version of what you do that doesn't require this context? The answer is the whole book. Stone Crown is a novel about a man with exceptional skills and the long, difficult work of finding the right place to use them. It's about South Boston — its invisible architecture, its fierce loyalty, its particular pride — and what it means to be received by a place that asks nothing of you except that you be exactly what you are. It's about the difference between the person you're becoming and the person you've been. And it's about two people circling each other across two years and several hundred cups of coffee, saying almost everything, until the morning one of them comes to the door with snow on her shoulders and says I have more things to say. For readers of Dennis Lehane's neighborhood specificity, Richard Russo's working-class interiority, and the restrained emotional precision of early Michael Connelly — Stone Crown is a novel that earns everything it asks you to feel. Quiet. Specific. Impossible to put down once it has you.