Ratings4
Average rating3.8
With his vivid, stylized prose, cyberpunk intensity, and seemingly limitless imagination, Jack Womack has been compared to both William Gibson and Kurt Vonnegut - though Gibson admits, "If you dropped the characters from Neuromancer into Womack's Manhattan, they'd fall down screaming and have nervous breakdowns". Random Acts of Senseless Violence, Womack's fifth novel, is a thrilling, hysterical, and eerily disturbing piece ot work.
Lola Hart is an ordinary twelve-year-old girl. She comes from a comfortable family, attends an exclusive private school, loves her friends Lori and Katherine, teases her sister Boob. But in the increasingly troubled city where she lives (a near-future Manhattan) she is a dying breed. Riots, fire, TB outbreaks, roaming gangs, increasing inflation, political and civil unrest all threaten her way of life, as well as the very fabric of New York City.
In her diary, Lola chronicles the changes she and her family make as they attempt to adjust to a city, and a country, that is spinning out of control. Her mother is a teacher, but no one is hiring. Her father is a writer, but no one is buying his scripts. Hounded by creditors and forced to vacate their apartment and move to Harlem, her family, and her life, begins to dissolve. Increasingly estranged from her privileged school friends, Lola soon makes new ones: Iz, Jude, and Weezie - wise veterans of the street who know what must be done in order to survive and are more than willing to do it. And the metamorphosis of Lola Hart, who is surrounded by the new language and violence of the streets, begins.
Simultaneously chilling and darkly hilarious, Random Acts of Senseless Violence takes the jittery urban fears we suppress, both in fiction and in daily life, and makes them explicit - and explicitly terrifying.
Series
1 released bookDryco is a 5-book series first released in 1987 with contributions by Jack Womack.
Reviews with the most likes.
bleak as hell. a little too close to current reality, depressingly so, for me to really enjoy it.
It all falls down. Sometimes exhausting and maudlin, sometimes gorgeous and powerful. Left me feeling AWFUL, but undeniably effective stylistically and thematically.
A dangerous downward spiral from innocence to random acts of senseless violence. A diary of a 12-year old girl, living in a world that's slowly falling apart amist growing poverty and civil unrest. While her country, her city, her family sinks lower and lower, her life is uprooted yet she stands strong and adapts. Her transformation is in her circle of friends, her exterior, her street-toughness, and most clearly noticable in her language, as she takes us on her journey in her diary.
Heartbreaking and jaw-dropping.