The New City: A Novel
In Newton, Maryland, in 1973, racial tensions are set to explode, in a novel of race, community, and social injustice in America
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Newton, Maryland, 1973. The Vietnam War is winding down, the Senate Watergate hearings are heating up. And in this pristine and meticulously planned community, an innocent misunderstanding is about to set the two men who control its quiet streets on a fateful collision course. Austin Swope is the white lawyer who made the dream of this new city a reality through years of cunning lawyering and smooth real-estate deals. Earl Wooten is the up-by-his-bootstraps black master-builder who with his bulldozers and backhoes raised Newton from its foundations - in the process escaping, he believes, a lifetime of racism and privation. They are best friends, as are their two teenaged sons, Teddy and Joel, each the repository of his father's deepest hopes.But cracks are appearing. A fight at the teen center over music escalates into a near race riot. Bad publicity ensues, which Austin knows is very bad for business. Earl has problems as well: construction delays, exploding gaslights, and a son in love with a beautiful model, Susan Truax, daughter of a Vietnam veteran who is finding peace a greater challenge than war. In a city born of a vision of racial harmony, the seeds have been sewn for a series of mixed signals, miscalculations, and entirely human failings to culminate in an inexorable slide toward destruction.
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