Praise for Providence
Well, if you lived in Providence, Geoffrey Wolff writes in his 1986 novel, it was difficult not to feel a shiver of pride...that the whole New England mob got run out of a laundry on Atwells Avenue. And pride is what I felt upon rereading this funny, audacious, spitfire of a novel. My beloved city is captured perfectly here, from Federal Hill to College Hill, its all in hereWJAR, the Agawam, the Brown rink, Benevolent Streetfull of the kind of characters that populate this jerkwater that outsiders bombed past on their way to Cape Cod. What a delight to have this Providence back in the world. Ann Hood, author of The Knitting Circle
What distinguishes Providence from most thrillers, from most novels really, is the care it takes in its language. Wolffs ear is perfect....If Ezra Pound had written a thriller, it might have been Providence. David Remnick, author of Holding the Note and editor of The New Yorker
Absolutely dazzling.
New York Times
The plot catches you by the throat.
The Atlantic
Geoffrey Wolff is probably one of the best writers in America. I can tell you that each of the few times I put Providence down I looked at the jacket photograph of the author and wished, with distressing envy, that I could write about a third as well. Thomas Mallon in The American Spectator
Cruises along like a hot-wired Mercedes.
Cleveland Plain Dealer
Tough-minded, funny, and savage.
Boston Globe
Nerve-racking...it will give any reader a stepped-up pulse.
People
Providence, R.I., is more than the backdrop for this intriguing tale; the city, faultlessly captured, assumes a role as crucial as those played by the main characters. Wolffs setting and characters come alive in a way that may shock and frighten some readers.
Publishers Weekly
Providence overspills with characters of consequence, with the speech and sounds of a place and time. It reads like one long chase scene, whirling from subplot to subplot, person to person. The result is exhilarating.
Wall Street Journal
The plot catches you by the throat. The subtlety in Providence lies . . . above all in the writing. It includes multitudes, the writing does: wisps from the old masters, the latest burble from pop culture, media noise, drug talk, Valspeak Easteverything is here.
The Atlantic
Providence is simply the pleasurable/morally terrifying novel one always hopes to find and seldom does.
Village Voice
Ingenious structure, flawless rhythms of speech, elegantly restrained imagery.
Los Angeles Times
Providence is a history, a veiled commentary on how America as we know it came be.
New Republic