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Brass

por Xhenet Aliu

MiembrosReseñasPopularidadValoración promediaMenciones
20214133,451 (3.9)10
A fierce debut novel about mothers and daughters, haves and have-nots, and the stark realities behind the American Dream A waitress at the Betsy Ross Diner, Elsie hopes her nickel-and-dime tips will add up to a new life. Then she meets Bashkim, who is at once both worldly and naive, a married man who left Albania to chase his dreams--and wound up working as a line cook in Waterbury, Connecticut. Back when the brass mills were still open, this bustling factory town drew one wave of immigrants after another. Now it's the place they can't seem to leave. Elsie, herself the granddaughter of Lithuanian immigrants, falls in love quickly, but when she learns that she's pregnant, Elsie can't help wondering where Bashkim's heart really lies, and what he'll do about the wife he left behind. Seventeen years later, headstrong and independent Luljeta receives a rejection letter from NYU and her first-ever suspension from school on the same day. Instead of striking out on her own in Manhattan, she's stuck in Connecticut with her mother, Elsie--a fate she refuses to accept. Wondering if the key to her future is unlocking the secrets of the past, Lulu decides to find out what exactly her mother has been hiding about the father she never knew. As she soon discovers, the truth is closer than she ever imagined. Told in equally gripping parallel narratives with biting wit and grace, Brass announces a fearless new voice with a timely, tender, and quintessentially American story. Advance praise for Brass The unforgettable mother and daughter at the center of Brass are as bright and tough as the metal itself, and Xhenet Aliu depicts their parallel journeys with equal parts grit and tenderness. Brass is a fierce, big-hearted, unflinching debut. --Celeste Ng, author of Everything I Never Told You Xhenet Aliu is ferociously talented. She's written a story so scathingly honest with characters so perfectly real, it left me breathless with admiration. There is no false sentiment here, no misplaced word, just a novel that pulses with a restless energy, a novel that pulses with life. --Cristina Henriquez, author of The Book of Unknown Americans.… (más)
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» Ver también 10 menciones

Mostrando 1-5 de 14 (siguiente | mostrar todos)
I loved this novel as a CT guy recognized the people, places and cultures and all the socio-economic-political nuances. The political of which I also connected with. Listened on Amazon audio prime and the voice narrations were good. I could picture the characters. I appreciated the theme of the story line since I work in community developent, social services/mental health and the expression I say in the office "too much life way too soon" kept recurring as I journied with the characters of Brass (addictions, teen pregnancy, rotten schooling, ethnic tensions, etc.). Great job. At the very end, I was not sure what might be next for the mom, daughter and sort of boyfriend. Not sure if that feeling of "what if, what's next" was what the author intended. Might be good set up for a sequel. ( )
  DunnGreg | Jan 15, 2023 |
Told from two alternating points of view two decades apart this is the story of Elsie, the single mom who started out with high hopes and good intentions when she fell in love with a married man.


"It was 1996, the middle of March, a brutal part of the year when spring was supposed to hit but didn't, when I'd given up on ever being warm again."


Elsie's only daughter Luljeta both loves and hates her mother, never quite feeling like she fits in anywhere. She has been told very little about her father and now that she is growing from child to young woman decides to find out the truth for herself.


Part love story, part coming of age tale, part family drama but without being sappy this bittersweet novel touched my heart and hit my funny bone with sarcastic wit.


I received an advance copy for review.
( )
  IreneCole | Jul 27, 2022 |
Chip Off the Old Block

Xhenet Aliu portrays the lives of two women, a mother and her daughter, a small American city, Waterbury, CT, crushed dreams, and an Albanian immigrant community in transition from homeland customs to rough and ready U.S. capitalism, though that can’t compare to the financial snookering perpetrated by Albanians on Albanians in the 1990s, half the timeframe of the novel. Doubtless the circumstances of mother Elsie and daughter Luljeta are often desperate, but also in the end inspirational, at least in that given determination, there seems always to be a way out.

Aliu sets the story in Waterbury, in the 1990s for Elsie, in current times for Luljeta. She has both women tell their stories, Elsie’s about how she came to have Luljeta and raise her as a single mother, Luljeta’s concerning her feelings of being a misfit and inadequate and yearning to know about her father. Elsie tells her story in the first-person. Luljeta tells her in the second-person, which in the skillful hands of Aliu proves a very effective device helping us understand how Luljeta feels about herself, removed from the world, incomplete, and cynical about the whole thing.

Waterbury, once a prosperous city trilling on the several brass works in the city, has fallen unto hard times by the 1990s. Many without marketable knowledge-work skills find themselves casting around for anything to put bread on the table, exactly the plight of Elsie. She works in a small family run Albanian restaurant operated by husband and wife Gjonni and Yllka. There, she takes up with the fry cook, Bashkim. He’s fairly fresh from Albania and a man with big dreams and a wife back home. Bashkim, as do many of his fellow countrymen, talk constantly about getting rich on mysterious investments, mysterious because whenever Elsie questions him about them he blows her off. (These investments, numbering at least 25, were really a rash of pyramid schemes that eventually tore Albania apart and led to the Albanian Civil War in 1997.) Eventually, Elsie becomes pregnant with Luljeta and Bashkim deserts her for reasons left for readers to discover on their own.

Luljeta’s 17, always the odd girl out in school to the point where she’s subject to constant abuse, keeps herself moving forward with her big plans, a trait not unlike he father’s. Then she receives bad news that sends her into a tailspin; her aspirational college NYU rejects her. Like many teens, she’s at odds on the outside and as much in conflict within her home with mom Elsie. Eventually, she concocts a plan to find her father, especially after she learns his name and a smidge of Elsie’s and his life together from Yllka. In a parallel to her mother’s life with Bashkim, she accepts the help of a well off Albanian-American college boy Ahmet, whose entrepreneurial ambition is owning a couple of Panera Bread franchises. With him, she begins a quest to find her father and gain an understanding of herself. All, as they say, doesn’t quite turn out as planned.

If Luljeta had the benefit Aliu provides us readers, she would realize that in the most important ways, she is very much her mother’s daughter, conveyed by Aliu in the attitude and dialogue she conjures for each in their alternating stories. Beautifully written, capturing both adaptive immigrant life and desperate times, Aliu tells the tales with edge and humor. It’s a novel not to be missed. ( )
  write-review | Nov 4, 2021 |
Chip Off the Old Block

Xhenet Aliu portrays the lives of two women, a mother and her daughter, a small American city, Waterbury, CT, crushed dreams, and an Albanian immigrant community in transition from homeland customs to rough and ready U.S. capitalism, though that can’t compare to the financial snookering perpetrated by Albanians on Albanians in the 1990s, half the timeframe of the novel. Doubtless the circumstances of mother Elsie and daughter Luljeta are often desperate, but also in the end inspirational, at least in that given determination, there seems always to be a way out.

Aliu sets the story in Waterbury, in the 1990s for Elsie, in current times for Luljeta. She has both women tell their stories, Elsie’s about how she came to have Luljeta and raise her as a single mother, Luljeta’s concerning her feelings of being a misfit and inadequate and yearning to know about her father. Elsie tells her story in the first-person. Luljeta tells her in the second-person, which in the skillful hands of Aliu proves a very effective device helping us understand how Luljeta feels about herself, removed from the world, incomplete, and cynical about the whole thing.

Waterbury, once a prosperous city trilling on the several brass works in the city, has fallen unto hard times by the 1990s. Many without marketable knowledge-work skills find themselves casting around for anything to put bread on the table, exactly the plight of Elsie. She works in a small family run Albanian restaurant operated by husband and wife Gjonni and Yllka. There, she takes up with the fry cook, Bashkim. He’s fairly fresh from Albania and a man with big dreams and a wife back home. Bashkim, as do many of his fellow countrymen, talk constantly about getting rich on mysterious investments, mysterious because whenever Elsie questions him about them he blows her off. (These investments, numbering at least 25, were really a rash of pyramid schemes that eventually tore Albania apart and led to the Albanian Civil War in 1997.) Eventually, Elsie becomes pregnant with Luljeta and Bashkim deserts her for reasons left for readers to discover on their own.

Luljeta’s 17, always the odd girl out in school to the point where she’s subject to constant abuse, keeps herself moving forward with her big plans, a trait not unlike he father’s. Then she receives bad news that sends her into a tailspin; her aspirational college NYU rejects her. Like many teens, she’s at odds on the outside and as much in conflict within her home with mom Elsie. Eventually, she concocts a plan to find her father, especially after she learns his name and a smidge of Elsie’s and his life together from Yllka. In a parallel to her mother’s life with Bashkim, she accepts the help of a well off Albanian-American college boy Ahmet, whose entrepreneurial ambition is owning a couple of Panera Bread franchises. With him, she begins a quest to find her father and gain an understanding of herself. All, as they say, doesn’t quite turn out as planned.

If Luljeta had the benefit Aliu provides us readers, she would realize that in the most important ways, she is very much her mother’s daughter, conveyed by Aliu in the attitude and dialogue she conjures for each in their alternating stories. Beautifully written, capturing both adaptive immigrant life and desperate times, Aliu tells the tales with edge and humor. It’s a novel not to be missed. ( )
  write-review | Nov 4, 2021 |
The plot is fairly simple: Elsie is 19 and waitressing in a depressed town when she gets pregnant by an Albanian immigrant. 17 years later, her daughter Luljeta, struggling to leave the same place, is trying to unravel her story. Intertwining the two plots in parallel narratives gives it some dramatic tension.

The characterization was good, but Aliu chose to write Elsie's narrative in the first person (fine) and Lulu's in the 2nd, and that choice becomes distracting as the novel wears on.

3.5 ( )
  arosoff | Jul 11, 2021 |
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To my mother, this book is for you, not about you, I promise.
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When the last of the brass mills locked up their doors and hauled ass out of town once and for all, it seemed all they left behind were blocks of abandoned factories that poked out from behind high stone gates like caskets floated to the surface after the great flood of '55.
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A fierce debut novel about mothers and daughters, haves and have-nots, and the stark realities behind the American Dream A waitress at the Betsy Ross Diner, Elsie hopes her nickel-and-dime tips will add up to a new life. Then she meets Bashkim, who is at once both worldly and naive, a married man who left Albania to chase his dreams--and wound up working as a line cook in Waterbury, Connecticut. Back when the brass mills were still open, this bustling factory town drew one wave of immigrants after another. Now it's the place they can't seem to leave. Elsie, herself the granddaughter of Lithuanian immigrants, falls in love quickly, but when she learns that she's pregnant, Elsie can't help wondering where Bashkim's heart really lies, and what he'll do about the wife he left behind. Seventeen years later, headstrong and independent Luljeta receives a rejection letter from NYU and her first-ever suspension from school on the same day. Instead of striking out on her own in Manhattan, she's stuck in Connecticut with her mother, Elsie--a fate she refuses to accept. Wondering if the key to her future is unlocking the secrets of the past, Lulu decides to find out what exactly her mother has been hiding about the father she never knew. As she soon discovers, the truth is closer than she ever imagined. Told in equally gripping parallel narratives with biting wit and grace, Brass announces a fearless new voice with a timely, tender, and quintessentially American story. Advance praise for Brass The unforgettable mother and daughter at the center of Brass are as bright and tough as the metal itself, and Xhenet Aliu depicts their parallel journeys with equal parts grit and tenderness. Brass is a fierce, big-hearted, unflinching debut. --Celeste Ng, author of Everything I Never Told You Xhenet Aliu is ferociously talented. She's written a story so scathingly honest with characters so perfectly real, it left me breathless with admiration. There is no false sentiment here, no misplaced word, just a novel that pulses with a restless energy, a novel that pulses with life. --Cristina Henriquez, author of The Book of Unknown Americans.

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