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The Perfume Burned His Eyes
The Perfume Burned His Eyes | Michael Imperioli
4 posts | 4 read | 8 to read
"Screenwriter and Emmy-winning actor Imperioli's first novel is the atmospheric coming-of-age story of 17-year-old Matthew, whose mother moves them from Queens to a posh apartment in Manhattan in 1976...Matt is a not an atypical teenager--think Holden Caulfield without the cynicism--but, often afraid and awkward, he is a reactor, not an actor, until the end of the novel, which, without foreshadowing, comes as a harrowing surprise...Imperioli can definitely write, and he gets high marks for the verisimilitude and empathy that he evokes in this fine crossover novel." --Booklist, Starred Review "A restless Queens teenager becomes the protégé of music legend Lou Reed in Imperioli's energetic debut novel...Matthew's first-person narrative is full of endearing vulnerability, immediacy, and authenticity. This is a sweet and nostalgic coming-of-age novel." --Publishers Weekly "Imperioli's lived-in details about the city help make the world feel realistic...[The novel] is an immersive trip into its narrator's memories of a turbulent time. Some fictional trips into 1970s New York abound with nostalgia; this novel memorably opts for grit and heartbreak." --Kirkus Reviews "Yes. It's That Guy From The Sopranos. If that's what makes you pick it up, fine. Just do it. Matthew, a 16 year old living in Queens loses both his father and his grandfather. His mother uproots the now family of two to Manhattan. He starts an unlikely friendship with two tenants in his building: Lou Reed and his trans girlfriend Rachel. Lou becomes a quasi-shamanic father figure to the boy as he navigates his lonely path to becoming a man. Heartbreaking. Pure. If you walk away from having read this book without feeling the deepest of empathy for teenagers and your own teenage self, you're just a stone, man. You can't be reached." --Fountain Bookstore, staff pick "Vividly imagined, compelling, and sympathetic, The Perfume Burned His Eyes convinces with the force of its emotional intensity." --Joyce Carol Oates "It has been a long time since I have regarded the prospect of taking up a new first novel other than with dull dread and a sardonic snort of rightfully prejudicial dismissal. Then I happened on this one: the kind of bird you don't see anymore in the kind of sky you don't see anymore. Mr. Imperioli can write, and he has given us a book--that most outmoded of handheld devices, devoid of all apps--that brings a rare and welcome breeze of imagination and wit." --Nick Tosches, author of Under Tiberius "This coming-of-age narrative is a fearless, towering inferno burning with raw truthfulness, stunning surprises, thrills, poetic writing, and an odyssey not just to be read, but reckoned with." --Richard Lewis, comedian, author of The Other Great Depression Matthew is a sixteen-year-old living in Jackson Heights, Queens, in 1976. After he loses his two most important male role models, his father and grandfather, his mother uses her inheritance to uproot Matthew and herself to a posh apartment building in Manhattan. Although only three miles away from his boyhood home, "the city" is a completely new and strange world to Matthew. Matthew soon befriends (and becomes a quasi-assistant to) Lou Reed, who lives with his transgender girlfriend Rachel in the same building. The drug-addled, artistic/shamanic musician eventually becomes an unorthodox father figure to Matthew, who finds himself head over heels for the mysterious Veronica, a wise-beyond-her-years girl he meets at his new school. Written from the point of view of Matthew at age eighteen, two years after the story begins, the novel concludes with an epilogue in the year 2013, three days after Lou Reed's death, with Matthew in his fifties.
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overtheedge
The Perfume Burned His Eyes | Michael Imperioli
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Pickpick

Growing up in Jackson Heights, Queens, abruptly moved to a high rise on E. 52nd St would definitely change a person's life, in many ways.
Especially when you become friends with your new neighbor, Lou Reed, living with his cross dressing friend.
Raw, sharp and illuminating coming of age story, that is an emotional and and wild carnival ride. The highs will make you raise your arms and scream; the lows you will feel in the pit of your stomach.

51 likes2 stack adds
blurb
overtheedge
The Perfume Burned His Eyes | Michael Imperioli
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This title caught my attention.....Michael Imperioli ia a new author for me. It's very short!! Starting today, intrigued already....

61 likes1 stack add
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kalenski
Perfume Burned His Eyes | Michael Imperioli
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Have been wanting to read this.

review
FountainBookstore
Perfume Burned His Eyes | Michael Imperioli
post image
Pickpick

Yes. It‘s That Guy From The Sopranos.
If that makes you pick it up, fine.

Matthew, a 16 year old living in Queens, loses both his father and grandfather. His mother uproots the now family of two to Manhattan. He starts an unlikely friendship with two tenants in his building: Lou Reed and his trans girlfriend.

Lou becomes a quasi-shamanic father figure to the boy as he navigates his lonely path to becoming a man.

Heartbreaking. Beautiful.

24 likes2 stack adds