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Crumbtown

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Some might say that Crumbtown isn’t a place. It’s a state of mind. And for the residents of this sinking, stinking, carcinogenic, potholed neighborhood, “There’s bad luck in the world, and then there’s crumbluck.” But for Don Reedy, a true victim of this phenomenon, his crumbluck is about to change.

Sentenced to 15 years in prison after a botched armed robbery, Don is paroled early when a television producer decides to turn Don’s tragic story into a television show. Back in Crumbtown and working as a special consultant on the shoot, Don wrestles with delusional actors, pines for a beautiful Russian bartender, and reunites with cops and accomplices alike. But when the opportunity presents itself, Don decides to do something really He robs the re-enactment of his legendary robbery. With the cameras rolling and the line between television and reality blurring, the hunt for Don—and a ratings coup—is on.

273 pages, Paperback

First published March 4, 2003

2 people are currently reading
68 people want to read

About the author

Joe Connelly

10 books16 followers

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5 stars
6 (8%)
4 stars
8 (11%)
3 stars
27 (38%)
2 stars
17 (23%)
1 star
13 (18%)
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews
Profile Image for Ted.
446 reviews6 followers
January 8, 2019
This is completely insane, thoroughly ridiculous crime story that is a lot of fun to read.

Set in a quasi dystopian America just slightly worse than ours (think RoboCop), Crumbtown is a decaying metropolis and cultural slum where reality TV has taken over. A host of crazy characters live in Crumbtown but the story revolves around two primary narrators.

The first is Rob Landetta, a down on his luck screenwriter/director (who I found the more original character). He's miserable and desperate like the city itself. Until he runs into (literally) a damsel in distress that leads him to his next great screenplay.

The screenplay Rob writes and the TV show he directs are based on the life of Don Reedy, a bank robber with a heart of gold. He's a familiar anti-hero in an unfamiliar world. The plot hums along nicely and gets tied up neatly.

But it's the writing that really shines. It jumps and jives with a rhythm that reminds you of a crime noir meets an Electric Kool-Aid Acid Test. It doesn't make sense, but it doesn't really matter. It feels familiar and fresh at the same time.

Profile Image for Ray Nessly.
385 reviews37 followers
Read
October 14, 2025
Abandoned, never finished.
Bought long ago, about 2003 when the book came out. I was buying hardbacks at that time, albeit half price, $11.50. Had high hopes, but soon could not unsee the author’s tendency to repeat certain sentence constructions. “Don kissed her down the stairs to the basement, his mouth never leaving, his hands in her hair, her neck, kissing the buttons down her shirt.”
Lots of “ing” words in the dialogue too. Along the lines of yada-yada, he said, stepping off the curb.
This might perhaps be less of problem for other readers, but it was for me.
22 years later, now that I’ve finally reminded myself why I abandoned this book, I can finally give it away.
Profile Image for Kim.
388 reviews4 followers
January 27, 2008
A chore to get through from the start. The characters were tough to follow, some were just not memorable at all, and the plot was so convoluted it was insane. I just felt the author was trying too hard the whole time. Good thing I picked this up in the dollar bin at the grocery store and didn't spend a lot of money. I hear good things about his first book, but I am hesitant to pick it up...
Profile Image for Lori.
954 reviews27 followers
Want to read
February 2, 2008
Bought this for a buck at a dollar store. I'm a sucker.

Ostensibly about a legendary bank robber returning to his sucky hometown, it can't decide if it's full of angst or satire, love or loathing.

Since I own it, I can stick it back on the shelf until I'm out of things to read.
Profile Image for M.D..
27 reviews1 follower
January 13, 2022
After the excellent "Bringing Out the Dead", which saw Connelly (a former paramedic in a pre-Guiliani NYC) writing about what he knows (being a paramedic amidst the crack and crime epidemic in a pre-Guiliani NYC) wrote this novel, which I suspect was either an unpublished manuscript that predated "Dead" or... a rough draft that should have never seen publication.

Connelly *seems* to be going for a Hubert Selby Jr. type thing, but instead, it reminds me of a (bad) Arthur Nercessian novel and a deservedly forgotten satire of 2000s reality television that Chuck Barris, the host of The Gong Show, wrote called "The Big Question".

Anyway, it's a shame, as the failure of this novel (financially, critically, and artistically) effectively put an end to a promising literary career. I can't imagine many people getting to the end of this book and being impressed.

That said, if Joe Connelly, wherever he is, decides to put out a new book, I'll be the first in line to buy it, such is the visceral power of his first. That couldn't have been an accident, right?
Profile Image for Carol Aselton.
225 reviews
September 18, 2022
This book was awful, Joe Connelly, as a writer, is terrible. There are a number of issues -- his writing is confusing, the characters are quite unbelievable, the locale would have been demolished years earlier this story, and bottom line, another convict freed to consul on a tv show. It appears Mr. Connelly wrote only 3 books, and that is 3 too many. Onto to something more enjoyable!!!!
16 reviews3 followers
September 20, 2007
I've got the hard cover but eh....great read, I'd read it again.
Profile Image for Y-von.
5 reviews
Read
April 23, 2013
For some reason I just didn't get into this book. I didn't actually finish it....maybe I'll give it another try later.
Displaying 1 - 10 of 10 reviews

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