“Broken Review” from Janet Riehl of Riehlife.com

Posted on 13 February 2010 by Spatziano

Broken
By J. Matthew Nespoli
ISBN: 978-1-935444-45-9

360 pages

http://worldaudience.powweb.com/pubs_bks/Broken.html

MENDING WHAT HAS BEEN BROKEN

Reviewed by Janet Grace Riehl

If your life has been broken, can it be mended? J. Matthew Nespoli’s debut novel “Broken” seeks to answer this heartfelt question many of us have asked in our lives.

Nespoli assembles a group of 14 desperately damaged characters equally balanced by gender. That’s a lot of characters to follow. Fortunately, there’s an appendix to help the reader keep them all straight. The book spans ten years in Los Angeles from October 1996 to April 2006 in a story told through alternating points of view structured by interlocking vignettes.

In the early part of “Broken,” we meet both rich and poor disaffected youths who are equally scarred by abuse and addiction. Sex, drugs, and violence mark and mar lives on the edge—from whatever class. Pursued by their demons they sabotage and break their dreams of fame, fortune, and out-sized success.

These characters are entrenched in their suffering whose roots sometimes arise from situations and sometimes from stupidity. What holds their individual lives and relationships together? The exchange between Amber and Ron (p. 146) answers this question clearly:

Amber: “Sometimes I think we’re all living a different version of the same sad story.”

Ron: “We were two broken people who needed each other.”

Gradually each of the 14 characters begin to heal their broken lives as these lives wind ever more tightly together. They learn to “keep walking/despite…broken selves” (p. 356).  As the tagline says, “We are all a little broken; love is the glue that keeps us from completely falling apart.”

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