The Narrows
The Narrows centers on an “extraction” of two members of a religious cult by a “deprogrammer” known as Black Lightning. Larry Brown, the novel’s narrator, is a cerebral and insecure junior high school teacher struggling with an unfaithful girlfriend and public school bureaucracy. He teams up with Black Lightning to rescue the cult members, one of whom is his cousin.
During the course of the novel Larry must come to terms with difficult observations concerning his cousin’s precarious emotional state and revelations about their upbringing. Larry’s experience offers an insight into many of the issues encountered by the first wave of baby boomers coming of age during the cultural transformation that took place in the early 1970’s.
The rescue of the cult members in The Narrows is secondary to the novel’s development of Larry’s character and his struggle to make sense of his place in a time when many of his fellow baby boomers were rebelling against the conformist ideology of the post-World War II “Establishment.” Larry’s struggle is depicted through a first person, present tense narrative that spans a ten-day period, utilizing dialogue, interior monologue, reminiscence and the cult extraction plot.
In many ways, these components of the narrative combine into a portrait of the novel’s characters and the times, similar to Pieter Brueghel’s painting Landscape with the Fall of Icarus, in which an event so amazing as a boy falling from the sky is juxtaposed with the everyday activities of a ploughman, shepherd and fisherman.
Praise
“…the different path individuals take to find their niche in the world. With Larry it's about maintaining the status quo--a respectable job, a nice apartment and a girlfriend--while Bradley is more open to exploring other avenues to find his nirvana.”
— Foreword Magazine
“The Narrows powerfully employs dialogue, philosophical and psychological reflection, and a slice-of-life feel so expansive that it's hard to believe the timeline embraces only ten pivotal days in the narrator's life.”
— Midwest Book Review
“Compelling characters and poignant philosophical questions drive The Narrows, where narrator Larry Brown struggles to find his place in the turbulent early ’70s. An excellent family drama with suspense and heart.”
— IndieReader