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Looking for Przybylski

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

When Ziggy Czarnecki was big in Detroit, the Motor City was hot, and so was he, the numbers man in the neighborhood with even more juice than the monsignor. In the '50s he gave out tickets to Tigers games by the dozen, and even the mayor came to the famous parties at his place on Harsen's Island. But that was then and Ziggy, having long ago lost the numbers and wrecked a good part of his life in the process, is now sixty-five, and he's gotten used to keeping his head down as he makes his way through the desolate city that's his home. Which is why his reaction surprises him when he hears that Przybylski the undertaker who now lives in California may be the one who figngered him all those years ago and brought down the raids that led to his downfall: Ziggy feels a jolt from somewhere that convinces him he's got to go out there and find out if it's true.

Crossing the country by Greyhound, Ziggy encounters storm, flood and fire. The endless prairie with its lost towns, the dusty Oklahoma settlement where nasty cowboys lurk, the menacingly stark desert - all of this excites his wonder and unlocks his memories. Ziggy's chance companion, Lenny Kurzweil, a would-be stand-up comic, accompanies him all the way to the coast where, with the help of an ex-priest and his girlfriend, Ziggy hunts for clues to the whereabouts of Przybylski.

Will he find the undertaker and, if he does, what can they possibly have to say to each other? Will Ziggy return to Detroit where his wife Maggie waits for him? In his sixth novel, K.C. Frederick takes us on a trip through the heart of America as well as the history of a time, a place, and an unforgettable character.

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    • Publisher's Weekly

      August 13, 2012
      Though he is perhaps best known for his novels depicting life in the Soviet Union, Frederick (Lyletown) has lately begun to explore the lives of Eastern Europeans in the U.S. and to mine the tension of divided loyalties and unexpected consequences. In his new novel he hones in on Ziggy Czarnecki, a one-time “numbers kingpin” thinking about mortality. A chance remark, suggesting that Ziggy’s long-ago nemesis, the undertaker Przybylski, may have been responsible for the raid that transformed Ziggy from successful to struggling forces him to re-evaluate “Rule Number One: don’t ever look back.” Propelled by an opaque impulse, Ziggy boards a Greyhound in blighted Detroit, where he lives, headed for California, where Przybylski lives. Traveling west, Ziggy meets people whose stories help him make sense of his past. In L.A., he reconnects with a nearly forgotten friend, and with his own son, who he hasn’t seen in four years. Soon enough, he can hardly remember what it was he wanted to see Przybylski about. Ziggy’s quest is related without sentiment, and while its scope is hardly epic, it resonates as a rumination on the trials and triumphs of a newly examined life.

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  • English

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