In this lively coming-of-age novel, young Danny Meyer lays bare a
landscape of illness and despair but emerges triumphant, with a new
awareness of the limitations of security and the lessons of eternity.
Danny's bubble-like existence in paradisal Madison is broken when his
father, a concert pianist and professor, is stricken with illness and
must give up his professorship. The family is forced to move to
Milwaukee to live at the brink of poverty while his father gets sicker,
his artistic mother struggles as bread-winner, and his brother becomes
delusional. Here, Danny finds himself in the uncertain position of
having to accept the responsibilities of manhood while still struggling
with adolescence.
In a world that keeps shifting, Danny befriends the son of a gangster
and, through his brushes with that compelling world of crime, finds his
way to a new confidence. Realistically portrayed, A Friend of
Kissinger, captures an authentic sense of place that is one part arty,
heartland Main Street and one part shady, small-time gangsterland.