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"Pulitzer Prize winning journalist LeDuff (Work and Other Sins) delivers
an edgy portrait of the decline, destruction, and possible redemption of
his hometown. Returning in 2008 after 20 years away, the former New
York Times staff writer finds a city in its death throes. The "Big
Three" car companies are months away from begging for bailouts,
arsonists are burning down vacant buildings, firefighters have faulty
equipment, ambulances take too long to arrive, and violent criminals
walk the streets. As a reporter for the Detroit News, LeDuff tries to
uncover where all the money, targeted toward municipal services, is
really going. As he exposes the corruption and ineptitude of the city's
government, he introduces readers to Detroit's larger-than-life former
mayor, Kwame Kilpatrick; the now jailed "self-serving diva" and former
city councilwoman, Monica Conyers; "political hit man" Adolph Mongo, as
well as the city's long-suffering firefighters, a mother who lost two
sons to random gun violence, and a corpse encased in four feet of ice.
Noting that Detroit is where "America's way of life was built, " LeDuff
argues that the city is a microcosm of what's occurring in the rest of
the country: foreclosures, unemployment, rising debt. In a spare, macho
style, with a discerning eye for telling details, LeDuff writes with
honesty and compassion about a city that's destroying itself and
breaking his heart." (Publisher Weekly)
Current Affairs
Monday, March 25, 2013
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