“A testament to the complexities of Detroit—as well as [to] Hebert's dedication to portraying the city with honesty and integrity. Angels of Detroit is an epic told through a diverse group of characters, all trying to redefine themselves in a struggling city.” —The Detroit Free Press


Angels of Detroit should be read for its insights, the perceptive back stories of its characters, the graphic way it points out the hard work still to do. For Detroiters who suffered through these last years, the book reads like a narrow escape.” —Gloria Whelan, Stateside, Michigan Public Radio


"Written with vivid compassion, Hebert's characters represent Detroit's many generations, races, and socioeconomic divisions. As their lives intersect, a multifaceted Detroit takes shape: a city to grieve, and a city just getting started." —Belt Magazine


“Ambitious, well-paced, observant—Angels of Detroit is a first-rate novel of flawed but admirable characters who want a brighter future.”   —Shelf Awareness


“A powerful and evocative ensemble novel.”   —Largehearted Boy


“Hebert's powerful novel will produce chills. . . . Scrambling for viable options, Hebert's current residents [of Detroit]—activists, planners, takers, opportunists, and optimists still living in a city that looks war-gutted—are undertaking to shake off the shroud of how-did-this-happen and discover renewed vigor. Hebert's tenacious prose . . . drives the narrative and brings characters . . . to visceral life.”   —Booklist


“Finds hope among the hopeless.” —The Detroit News


Angels of Detroit . . . pays homage to a city that at one time embodied the country's image of homegrown success, built with a uniquely American combination of brains and brawn. Whether the angels will save it from destruction or accelerate its tragic fate, the broader question this novel asks is whether the rest of the U.S. is fated to follow its path.” —Nashville Scene


“Christopher Hebert's prose is as incantatory as it is precise, summoning forth a city dreamlike in its strangeness but unmistakably grounded in living reality. Few contemporary writers invoke the secret landscapes of American cities this well. An exciting addition to the new canon of brave contemporary novels devoted to our twenty-first century lives, its every page bearing witness to the dark, desperately digging for hope, the work of a fine novelist writing unflinching before all the good and the bad, the ugly and the ultimately beautiful.” —Matt Bell, author of Scrapper


“Written in evocative prose with careful detail, this is a veracious portrayal of a decimated city. It moves at an exciting pace, the various plot threads braiding rapidly. Most poignant is the insight offered about those fighting to amend the damage. These characters are flawed and more appealing for it. Perhaps Hebert intends to suggest that this is true of the city itself. An expansive yet intimate tale of the efforts made to save a decaying Detroit.”

Kirkus Reviews


“Angels of Detroit is an unforgettable take on one of America's great urban tragedies. Its ruins are real and devastating, crowded with magnificent characters, shot through with passion, alive with history, drama, and courage. I read this novel urgently, feeling wonder on every page.” —Whitney Terrell, author of The Good Lieutenant


“His descriptive, flowing prose paints a precise picture. The characters' connections are woven together seamlessly. . . . His familiarity with Detroit is palpable.” —Green Bay Press-Gazette


“Hebert's varied and vividly-drawn ensemble cast brings to life a portrait of Detroit so multifaceted that it is, really, an original literary vision of late-capitalist America. Damning, true, prophetic: Angels of Detroit is also compelling, driven by an authentic realism and intricate plotting that is—literally—explosive. A profoundly satisfying novel about vital issues driven by living characters—about whom I will be thinking for a long time.”   —Neil Gordon, author of The Company You Keep


“So completely did I fall for the misfits and idealists that populate Angels of Detroit that more than once I found myself on Google Maps, seeking signs of their real life counterparts, infusing that beleaguered city with hope. Christopher Hebert's wondrous novel brims and bristles with the rarest of fictional qualities: raw humanity.”   —David Goodwillie, author of American Subversive


“Hebert tells this story through the interactions of eleven major characters whose lives intersect in subtle and suspenseful ways. . . . [He] wonderfully brings out his ensemble's human qualities, whether they're fearful, compassionate, or tenacious.”    —Publishers Weekly


“One of the most admirable traits in this book is its extreme even-handedness, its commitment to portraying its characters truly and deeply, critically but never dismissively. We come to see how a series of small decisions—not blameless, but often understandable—can cascade into the gutting of a great city. We also see how the absurdly difficult, quixotic struggle to put the city back together can give a life meaning.” —Scott Hutchins, Fiction Writers Review

"A humbler, more endearing bunch of rainbow-hued misfits never fumbled their broken-hearted way towards revolution than those we meet in Christopher Hebert's Angels of Detroit–truly a novel of our moment, both in the way it stares unsentimentally at the real trouble we are in–a world of poisoned children and cities in ruins–and in the deep and detailed empathy it shows for characters of every class and provenance. Hebert gets Detroit right, in this beautifully made book: his careful drawing of its physical catastrophe locates the city at the exact boundary between gritty-real and surreal, between last hope and post-apocalyptic nightmare.”  

     —Jaimy Gordon, author of the National Book Award-winning Lord of Misrule


“Set in a city that's either deteriorating beyond hope or rising from the ashes, Angels of Detroit pulls off the magic trick of all great fiction: it makes the world we live in now seem both wondrous and strange.”    —Adam Ross, author of Mr. Peanut


“A rust belt epic by a writer of distinctive vision. More than a dozen years in the making. . . . Worth the wait.”     

—Peter Ho Davies, Ploughshares


“Hebert's Detroit is an eerie and cinematic ghost town.”

Wall Street Journal







Once an example of American industrial might, Detroit is now bankrupt, its streets dark, its storefronts vacant. Miles of city blocks lie empty, saplings growing through the cracked foundations of abandoned buildings. 

 

In razor-sharp, beguiling prose, Angels of Detroit draws us into the lives and voices of multiple characters struggling to define their futures in this desolate landscape: a scrappy group of activists trying to save the city with placards and protests; a curious child who knows the blighted city as her own personal playground; an elderly great-grandmother eking out a community garden in an oil-soaked patch of dirt; a carpenter with an explosive idea of how to give the city a new start; a confused idealist who has stumbled into debt to a human trafficker; a weary corporate executive who believes she is doing right by the city she remembers at its prime—each of these characters’ desires are as distinct as their voices, and their visions for a better city are on a collision course. 

 

In this propulsive, masterfully plotted epic, an urban wasteland whose history is plagued with riots and unrest is reimagined as an ambiguous new frontier—a site of tenacity, possibility, even hope. Driven by struggle and suspense, and shot through with a startling empathy, Christopher Hebert’s magnificent second novel unspools an American story for our time.

christopherhebert

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