For fans of Richard Russo and Stewart O'Nan comes a frank and funny
debut novel about the workaday world of an unassuming **carpet
installer
**Frank "Ace" Renzetti has been installing carpet for over forty years,
working the upscale neighborhoods of Philadelphia's Main Line. At a time
when he should be considering retirement, Frank takes on one of the
biggest--and strangest--jobs of his career. The house is owned by a
volatile and eccentric divorcee, its rooms teeming with weary
contractors, many of whom have been on the job for months. A pampered
dog regularly sabotages everyone's work, and the general contractor
patrols the site as if it's the border.
Amid this week-long circus, Frank's body starts to fail him, and when he
loses both his helpers to a drug bust, he is left to complete the job by
himself on one good leg. Desperate, he poaches a day-laborer from his
competitor and finds that the young, paperless El Salvadoran has a way
with carpet and just might be the future of the trade. As the physical
challenges of the job mount, the fate of Frank's business, and, with
that, the fate of his blue-collar genius, become increasingly uncertain.
Wry and insightful, Rug Man is a tribute to a bygone era of craftsmen
whose work was the source of their greatest suffering but also their
greatest pride.
"It takes a skilled writer to craft an interesting and entertaining tale
about carpet installation, but David Amadio has done that and a lot more
in his delightful debut novel, Rug Man. Of course, the story here is
not just about carpet installation, for Amadio has a larger tale to
tell. In its heart, Rug Man is about discipline, sacrifice, humility,
dedication to craft and the possibility of unexpected grace when one's
world seems to be - um, well -unraveling."
--*Italian American Herald
*"A thousand suburban nightmares converge in David Amadio's perfectly
measured debut. But Frank Renzetti can handle it. Frank is more than the
forgotten man--he is the forgotten manner of man. It's a great pleasure
to meet him again."
--Nathaniel Popkin, author of The Year of the Return