The Man with the Golden Arm tells the story of Frankie Machine, the golden arm dealer at a back street Chicago gambling den. Frankie reckons he?s a tough guy in the Chicago underworld but finds that he?s not tough enough to kick his heroin addiction. With consummate skill and a finely-tuned ear for the authentic dialogue of the backstreets, Algren lays bare the tragedy and humour of Frankie?s world.
Features the first UK publication of a foreword by Kurt Vonnegut and an afterword by Studs Terkel.
"Algren's skill brings his city to life; his writing carries you into his heart and his outraged compassion ensures that his story is as relevant now as ever."
'Powerful, grisly, antic, horrifying, poetic, compassionate - [there is virtually nothing more that one could ask.'
'With characters like these, and Algren's fast-talking pulp style, it's as compelling a read as you'll find this year'
The Big Issue'A classic portrayal...stylish, atmospheric and moving'
Independent on Sunday'What Runyon did for New York with Guys and Dolls, Algren does for the 'windy city'....On its last page The Man with the Golden Arm lapses into - or should that be achieves - the condition of poetry, something Algren's writing was always close to.'
The Herald'America's finest, yet most neglected writer...Nelson Algren's enduring love for the Windy City and its struggling immigrants fired his hauntingly brilliant prose....Thanks to Rebel Inc, The Man with the Golden Arm may now be remembered as Algren's work. It would be only a fragment of what he deserved.'
Bizarre'a thriller that packs more of a punch than Pulp Fiction and more grittiness than either Raymond Chandler or Dashiell Hammett, The Man with the Golden Arm, is incredibly lyrical, as poetic as it is dramatic, combining the brutal dialogue of guys and broads with dreamlike images, and puncturing the harrowing narrative with revelations that flesh out every tragic figure into a fully-realised, complex character'
The Scotsman'an extraordinary piece of fiction...If the Bridget Jones brigade somehow drifted Nelson Algren's way the world would undoubtedly be a better place and Rebel Inc's bottom line invisible without a telescope. Keep my dream alive and buy this book.'
The Crack'a stirring hard-boiled read'
Maxim'immortalised in film...in print the hyperbolic, rhythmic style of Algren delivers a far more powerful body blow to the imagination'
The Scotsman'Algren is an artist whose sympathy is as large as Victor Hugo's, an artist who ranks, with this novel, among our best American authors.'
Chicago Sun Times'Powerful, grisly, antic, horrifying, poetic, compassionate - [there is virtually nothing more that one could ask.'
New York Times Book Review'A true novelist's triumph.'
Time'This is a man writing and you should not read it if you cannot take a punch - Mr Algren can hit with both hands and move around and he will kill you if you are not awfully careful ... Mr Algren, boy, you are good.'
Ernest Hemingway