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Lost Empress

A Novel

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From the acclaimed PEN/Robert W. Bingham Prize-winning author of A Naked Singularity, a shockingly hilarious novel that tackles, with equal aplomb, both America’s most popular sport and its criminal justice system
 
From Paterson, New Jersey, to Rikers Island to the streets of New York City, Sergio de la Pava’s Lost Empress introduces readers to a cast of characters unlike any other in modern fiction: dreamers and exiles, immigrants and night-shift workers, a lonely pastor and others on the fringes of society—each with their own impact on the fragile universe they navigate.
 
Nina Gill, daughter of the aging owner of the Dallas Cowboys, was instrumental in building her father’s dynasty. So it’s a shock when her brother inherits the franchise and she is left with the Paterson Pork, New Jersey’s failing Indoor Football League team. Nina vows to take on the NFL and make the Paterson Pork pigskin kings of America. All she needs to do is recruit the coach, the players, and the fans.
 
Meanwhile, Nuno DeAngeles—a brilliant and lethal criminal mastermind—has been imprisoned on Rikers Island for a sensational offense. Nuno fights for his liberty—while simultaneously planning an even more audacious crime.
 
In Lost Empress, de la Pava weaves a narrative that encompasses Salvador Dalí, Joni Mitchell, psychiatric help, emergency medicine, religion, theoretical physics, and everything in between. With grace, humor, and razor-sharp prose, all these threads combine, counting down to an epic and extraordinary conclusion.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from April 2, 2018
      In his extraordinary new novel, de la Pava (A Naked Singularity) weaves together several story lines centered around Paterson, N.J. Nina Gill is a preternaturally gifted football strategist. She stands to inherit the Dallas Cowboys, but instead ends up with the family’s far less desirable Indoor Football League franchise, the Paterson Pork. However, an NFL lockout gives Nina the opportunity to build an absurd alternative for showcasing the sport she loves. A few miles from Paterson, Nuno DeAngeles sits imprisoned in Rikers Island. An out-of-place intellectual, Nuno is able to manipulate his lawyer and eventually lands in the somewhat cushier Bellevue Hospital while he conspires with his fellow inmate Solomon to commit a mysterious crime. Between these two worlds, de la Pava takes readers into the lives of ordinary Patersonians who work as EMTs, 911 operators, and a pig-suit-wearing mascot. Like his previous work, de la Pava’s novel employs a variety of narrative forms, including legal briefs, sermons, phone transcripts, and the text of a prison handbook. De la Pava is a maximalist worldbuilder, and the incredible multiverse he constructs in this book establishes him as one of the most fearsomely talented American novelists working today.

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from April 1, 2018
      If Thomas Pynchon and Elmore Leonard had conspired to write North Dallas Forty, this might be the result: a madcap, football-obsessed tale of crossed destinies and criminal plots gone awry.You know you're in fictional territory when the Dallas Cowboys are portrayed as a winning team; the world is veritably upside down when things like that happen. That's one of many conceits de la Pava (Personae, 2011, etc.), New York City public defender by day and shaper of the modern canon by night, plays with in this loopy yarn, which embraces surrealist art, the law, theoretical physics, politics, and just about everything else under the sun. But especially football: At the heart of de la Pava's shaggy dog tale, overlong but not overworked, is an unabashed love for pigskin. Young Nina Gill hauls up the underdog Paterson Pork team from deepest obscurity in a scenario out of a gridiron version of King Lear after having been shoved aside from inheriting said Cowboys after her father dies; in grim revenge, Nina decides to take the indoor-playing Pork to the NFL championship, an impossibility, of course. She's an encyclopedia of the game: "Before 'seventy-eight defensive backs could hit receivers with impunity all the way down the field provided the ball hadn't been thrown," she tells sidekick Dia Nouveau, who's scrambling to keep up with "the various permutations of football knowledge that woman is essentially compelling her to acquire." Dia has bigger fish to fry, though, and so does Nuno DeAngeles, street philosopher and would-be crime lord, who's gotten himself tucked away on Rikers Island and finds that his "only ally now is René Descartes," inasmuch as Cartesian dualism allows his mind to flow freely out into the boroughs to work mischief until his body can catch up. Parts of the story are seemingly the standard aspirational sports rah-rah, but turned on their head, and the caper that plays out alongside Nina's championship run, laced with philosophy and cornerbacks, is a blast to watch unfold.A whirling vortex of a novel, confusing, misdirecting, and surprising--and a lot of fun.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from May 1, 2018
      De la Pava's (Personae, 2013) latest novel mashes up tales of urban hardship and injustice in a jaunty farce about an upstart football league, inviting reflection on outsiderness. Nuno, a hyperverbal intellectual with a penchant for violent crime, festers in Bellevue and Rikers Island, waxing philosophical when he isn't manipulating his defense attorney or yearning for his teenage crush, the student-loan-encumbered Dia Nouveau. Dia has her hands full with her new job working for Nina Gill, the unstoppable new commissioner of the Indoor Football League, whose ragbag Paterson Pork franchise will take on the Dallas Cowboys for national dominance. Meanwhile, the people of Paterson, New Jersey, including world-weary prison guards and 911 operators, hardworking immigrants, and aged shut-ins, scrape by, their lives drenched with loss but also connected in profound ways. As with the author's debut novel, A Naked Singularity (2012), the New York City criminal-justice system figures prominently, its jargon and bureaucratic instruments providing realist texture, while its absurdities and cruelties fuel the fury that is this novel's molten core. Again we witness de la Pava's gleaming wit, philosophical benders and pop-culture fixations, and the sheer intensity with which he hurls his words in this even more assured work of incandescent literary maximalism. And the underdog triumphs again.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Kirkus

      Starred review from April 1, 2018
      If Thomas Pynchon and Elmore Leonard had conspired to write North Dallas Forty, this might be the result: a madcap, football-obsessed tale of crossed destinies and criminal plots gone awry.You know you're in fictional territory when the Dallas Cowboys are portrayed as a winning team; the world is veritably upside down when things like that happen. That's one of many conceits de la Pava (Personae, 2011, etc.), New York City public defender by day and shaper of the modern canon by night, plays with in this loopy yarn, which embraces surrealist art, the law, theoretical physics, politics, and just about everything else under the sun. But especially football: At the heart of de la Pava's shaggy dog tale, overlong but not overworked, is an unabashed love for pigskin. Young Nina Gill hauls up the underdog Paterson Pork team from deepest obscurity in a scenario out of a gridiron version of King Lear after having been shoved aside from inheriting said Cowboys after her father dies; in grim revenge, Nina decides to take the indoor-playing Pork to the NFL championship, an impossibility, of course. She's an encyclopedia of the game: "Before 'seventy-eight defensive backs could hit receivers with impunity all the way down the field provided the ball hadn't been thrown," she tells sidekick Dia Nouveau, who's scrambling to keep up with "the various permutations of football knowledge that woman is essentially compelling her to acquire." Dia has bigger fish to fry, though, and so does Nuno DeAngeles, street philosopher and would-be crime lord, who's gotten himself tucked away on Rikers Island and finds that his "only ally now is Ren� Descartes," inasmuch as Cartesian dualism allows his mind to flow freely out into the boroughs to work mischief until his body can catch up. Parts of the story are seemingly the standard aspirational sports rah-rah, but turned on their head, and the caper that plays out alongside Nina's championship run, laced with philosophy and cornerbacks, is a blast to watch unfold.A whirling vortex of a novel, confusing, misdirecting, and surprising--and a lot of fun.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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