This novel explores the lives of the people who live in Spofford, a traditionally African-American part of Pittsburgh, and the challenges they face in a neighborhood blighted by civic neglect and mismanagement.
O’Nan uses interlocking narratives, each chapter able to stand alone as a short story, to bring to life the people who live in Spofford. The first chapter focuses on Chris, who fell off a new bridge while tagging it with his friend Bean. Bean dies, and Chris loses the use of his limbs, wheelchair bound for life. This leads into the next story, about a telephone operator who consoles Chris’s mom who thinks her husband Harold is having an affair. The operator feels lonely and her dog is dying. Each story picks out a character or a situation in the previous narrative and creates a complicated canvas that illuminates that person’s life, their everyday trials, what they wish for, and what they do not receive.
The first and last chapters are told in the slang of the gangs of Spofford. The narrator is a young man, but it’s not clear that he’s someone we’ve seen. Instead, he tells us about Chris and Bean and talks about the neighborhood, its politics and its history. Spofford was middle class, and now its drained, marginalized, and prey to violence and bored young people who are hurting and willing to take risks. The other chapters come from a more accessible narrative voice which is interested in observing the people in their homes, in their private moments, and interacting with the neighborhood at large.
At the beginning of the book, the reader learns that Spofford hasn’t always been poor, but poverty has come as a result of a bypass built to get people from the white suburbs into the city. The bypass has divided Spofford from Pittsburgh, so that it’s cut off from commerce. It’s become a stagnant backwater, and dies slowly. Then we begin to focus more tightly on Chris’s family, and the desires that pull them apart: Harold for life as a gay man, his son Eugene for a straight life that avoids gangs and prison, Chris to re-make himself as an artist, and Jackie to keep her family together. But what’s happened to their neighborhood puts pressure on the family with Chris in a wheelchair and Eugene trying to stay free of the gangs. Ultimately, these forces provoke lasting changes that affect their lives.