On the eve of his thirty-fifth birthday, the unnamed black narrator of
Man Gone Down finds himself broke, estranged from his white wife and
three children, and living in the bedroom of a friend's six-year-old
child. He has four days to come up with the money to keep the kids in
school and make a down payment on an apartment for them in which to
live. As we slip between his childhood in inner city Boston and
present-day New York City, we learn of a life marked by abuse,
abandonment, raging alcoholism, and the best and worst intentions of a
supposedly integrated America. This is a story of the American Dream
gone awry, about what it's like to feel preprogrammed to fail in life
and the urge to escape that sentence.