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Wonderland

A Boston Tale of Hustling Hard and Breaking Even

ebook
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 14 weeks
0 of 1 copy available
Wait time: About 14 weeks
A "touching memoir" (The New York Times Book Review) that "brilliantly blends a history of Boston and its surrounding areas with the history of a fascinating—and at times functional—family" (Isaac Fitzgerald, New York Times bestselling author of Dirtbag, Massachusetts) as one girl discovers how to break free from the criminal underworld that surrounds her.
Nicole Treska was born to a family of gangsters. In the 1970s, during Boston's mob wars, her grandfather's diner was an unofficial headquarters for Whitey Bulger and other members of the Winter Hill Gang. Nicole's father was also an associate of the gang: there was talk that, before Nicole could walk, her stroller was used as a decoy to sell drugs. In 1985, her father was arrested and tried—sentenced to two years in prison for federal drug trafficking.

Wanting to offer a better life to her children, Nicole's mother moved her and her sister out of Boston. As an adult, Nicole strove to separate herself from her past, establishing a career as a writer and professor in New York City. But when she learns her father's sister has passed away, she returns to her hometown and reunites with her dad—now stooped and struggling to walk on a bad knee. As she gets reacquainted with him and the old neighborhood, Nicole is forced to reconcile with her harrowing childhood and its lingering impact.

A "compelling portrait" (Safiya Sinclair, National Book Critics Circle Award–winning author of How to Say Babylon) "written with urgency, vulnerability, and compassion" (Ashley C. Ford, New York Times bestselling author of Somebody's Daughter), Wonderland masterfully explores and elucidates the line between helping family and hurting ourselves.
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    • Kirkus

      May 15, 2024
      A New York City-based writer reflects on the life and family that she left behind in Boston but never left her consciousness. In her debut memoir, Treska describes a Boston comprised of working-class people who dreamed of better and often of the kind of escape promised by the long-defunct Wonderland amusement park. "Boston's rich history of greased handshakes and popping flashbulbs for the businessman, politicians, and mobsters making deals, created upheaval and impermanence for the rest of us," writes the author. "We were sold out and told it was for the public good." Treska's way out of the city and her peripatetic military family, plagued by mental illness and drug addiction, was through education. In 2008, she came to New York to study, only to find herself caught in a post-economic crash world that drove her into debt and kept her "on poverty's constant edge." However, her willingness to try new things--e.g., becoming an Airbnb host--paid off, even as she found herself at the mercy of landlords seeking to profit from her rent-stabilized apartment. As Treska found a way forward through difficulty, her past continued to haunt her. An on-again, off-again relationship with a visiting professor she called the Turk taught the author that her need for illusion made her no different from her Vietnam veteran father, whom Treska tried to save from a tantalizing--but also exploitative--online relationship. At the same time, the Turk's inability to commit made her realize how much her father's inability to give of himself had influenced her choice of partner. As the author explores the way class, place, and family shape identity and desire, she also celebrates her ability to accept, with ferocity and love, the painful past that made her who she was. A poignantly affecting memoir about surviving and thriving.

      COPYRIGHT(2024) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      May 27, 2024
      In this winning debut memoir, CUNY writing instructor Treska untangles what she learned from growing up in a working-class, crime-adjacent Boston family. Treska came of age in the 1980s and ’90s, long after the beachside amusement park of the book’s title had shuttered, though its legacy lived on as a symbol of the hopes and dreams of the “hardscrabble Bostonians” who populated the author’s early life. Her father, Phil, was a habitual gambler and occasional drug trafficker whose perennial optimism (“Each decision and small act was imbued with hope”) sculpted the author’s own sensibility. His entanglements with the Winter Hill Gang and other shady figures taught Treska to “hone her hustle,” a lesson she’s put to good use as one of “the waitresses of academia,” who makes ends meet by renting out her Harlem apartment on Airbnb. The death of Treska’s paternal aunt spurs her to return home to Boston and anchors her self-reflections, but there’s not much narrative thrust to speak of. Instead, Treska paints indelible impressions of Phil, his criminal cohort, and her lovers, including the avoidant academic she falls for in New York City. It amounts to an arresting and compassionate self-portrait. Agent: Annie DeWitt, Shipman Agency.

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