cover image The Edge of Lost

The Edge of Lost

Kristina McMorris. Kensington, $15 trade paper (352p) ISBN 978-0-7582-8118-0

McMorris (The Pieces We Keep) subverts the rags-to-riches immigrant story in this breezy tale set between Ireland and Alcatraz. In the preface, we meet inmate 257 of Alcatraz before the story opens years earlier in Ireland when young Shanley Keagan, orphaned and scraping by with his drunken uncle, discovers he has an American father. They set off to find him, but Shan's uncle dies in transit, leaving Shan to fend for himself. Fortunately, the Capellos, an Italian family on the ship, take an interest, although the tradeoff is that Shan must give up his name and become a Capello. The story makes for compulsive reading as it jumps between Shan's youth and young adulthood, touching on such diverse underworlds as the Black Hand mafia, which Shan becomes entangled with when he joins the Capellos, and the Vaudeville life, which he aspires to join as a performer and comic. There is a lot to cover however, and at times Shan's character as presented to the reader %E2%80%93 sensitive, loyal, and passive%E2%80%93 contrasts rather unconvincingly with how others characters perceive him %E2%80%93 tough and ruthless, but this is still an intricate and intriguing entry into the American immigrant canon. (Dec.)