"A beautiful, heartfelt, sometimes funny, occasionally harrowing story of a man making his way through the minefield of his own family history. Di Prisco has lived more lives than most of us, and managed to get it all down in this riveting book." ÂJerry Stahl, author of Permanent Midnight and Bad Sex On Speed
ÂDi Prisco delivers thoughtful contemplation of the human condition and plenty of self-examination that reveals how he made it to where he is, and why he survived when others didnât. His sharp wit and hard-won wisdom make Subway to California a story that anyone whoâs risen out of a hardscrabble life with the odds stacked against them will love and learn from.â ÂForeWord Reviews
Â[Di Prisco] can break your heart recalling the most romantic memory of his life or make you laugh out loud when, for example, he defines the Catholic notion of Limbo: Ânot a horrible place, not a great place, sort of like parts of Staten Island.ââÂKirkus Reviews
"Brimming with humor, heartbreak, and at times the feel an old time Catholic confessional, Subway to California is a one-of-a-kind read. Joseph Di Prisco's story evokes a time and place that is no longer part of the American landscape; a place where loyalty to family, neighborhood, and way of life was the norm. At A Great Good Place for Books we can't wait to place it in our customers' hands." ÂKathleen Caldwell, A Great Good Place for Books
ÂFrom his tough, chaotic childhood and the tortuous misadventures of his young adulthood, Joseph Di Prisco has crafted an achingly tenderÂand frequently funnyÂmemoir, a book replete with all the rich unfolding and poetic reflection of a novel, and all the focused research and unsparing truth-seeking of biography. Moving seamlessly between past and present, between the Church and the casino, scholarship and addiction, Brooklyn and the Bay Area, Di Prisco gives us a dizzying aerial view of a life, and of a familyÂan account that is at once an intimate meditation on the authorâs interior life, and a gripping family history reaching back to Ellis Island in the 1920s.
Threaded throughout is the authorâs irreverent, ecstatic love of words, of storytelling, an affirmation of the transcendent grace that literature can offer. Di Priscoâs prose, like his poetry, is imbued with a rare warmth and graceÂand heâs brought these talents to bear on his remarkable personal history in this captivating memoir.â ÂLaura Cogan, Editor-in-Chief, ZYZZYVA
ÂWhat Joe DiPrisco has written here is likely to become the standard-bearer for all future memoirsÂ
A comedy and tragedy filled with paternal pratfalls, missteps and odd criminal adventures, all of which cast Joe onto the road as a gambler, teacher, writer, political activist, accused criminal in his own right, father and husband, and so much more! This Subway ride is the real deal.â ÂSteven Gillis, The Consequence of Skating and The Law of Strings