Contenders, Erika Krouse, Rare Bird Books, 2015, 317 pp
Summary from Goodreads: Street-fighter Nina
Black lives by her fists in Denver, stealing wallets and taking
advantage of men who try to take advantage of her. This symbiosis is
upended when one of her marks, a cop and MMA comeback contender, wants
his wallet — and his dignity — back.
Avoiding retribution is difficult enough alone, but it becomes impossible once Nina gets unexpected custody of an orphaned eight-year-old niece she didn’t know existed, accompanied by her long-lost (and ever-vigilant) childhood flame, Isaac. When the situation implodes, only one person can help Nina earn back her life, and prepare her for the fight that might end it.
Avoiding retribution is difficult enough alone, but it becomes impossible once Nina gets unexpected custody of an orphaned eight-year-old niece she didn’t know existed, accompanied by her long-lost (and ever-vigilant) childhood flame, Isaac. When the situation implodes, only one person can help Nina earn back her life, and prepare her for the fight that might end it.
My Review:
"I coulda been a contender." The line I always remember from On the Waterfront. I wonder if Erika Krouse had that line in mind as she wrote this astonishing novel.
Nina Black was not a bum but she lived among bums and other derelicts and made her living by stealing in Denver, CO. Her passion was fighting, trained as she was within an inch of her life in Mixed Martial Arts, MMA. Therefore, she had no need to work in a cubicle or office or retail store and she had no fear of the streets at night or of rapacious men. Except, of course, there was one man about whom she had to be wary.
This novel is full of gritty violence and of a woman's tragic childhood but at the same time explores the heart, longings, and the idea of how one makes a family. It includes a precocious and brave child. Ultimately it is a story of how one woman overcame huge obstacles to find love and to create a family she didn't even know she craved.
In addition to all that there is humor. Erika Krouse's prose is tight and spare, yet she is as at ease with funny, tender moments as she is brilliant when writing fight scenes. She creates unlikable characters only to make you care about and feel you understand them.
Contenders is another novel I received as a Nervous Breakdown Book Club selection. I also listened to a fascinating interview with the author on OtherPeople. She is a private investigator as well as a novelist. Imagine if V I Warshawski also wrote novels!
(Contenders is available in paperback by order from Once Upon A Time Bookstore.)