Blog Tour/Book Review: The Emperor of Shoes by Spencer Wise

 

FINAL Emperor of Shoes B T Poster (1)

I’m delighted to be co-hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The Emperor of Shoes by Spencer Wise alongside my tour buddy, Emma’s Bookish Corner.  My thanks to Anne at Random Things Tours for inviting me to take part in the tour and for introducing me to a book I might otherwise not have read.  You can read my review below.


The Emperor of ShoesAbout the Book

Alex Cohen, a twenty-six-year-old Jewish Bostonian, is living in southern China, where his father runs their family-owned shoe factory. Alex reluctantly assumes the helm of the company, but as he explores the plant’s vast floors and assembly lines, he comes to a grim realization: employees are exploited, regulatory systems are corrupt and Alex’s own father is engaging in bribes to protect the bottom line.

When Alex meets a seamstress named Ivy, his sympathies begin to shift. She is an embedded organizer of a pro-democratic Chinese party, secretly sowing dissonance among her fellow labourers. Will Alex remain loyal to his father and his heritage? Or will the sparks of revolution ignite?

Praise for The Emperor of Shoes

‘Spencer Wise’s The Emperor of Shoes is one of the most complex, nuanced, character-rich first novels I have ever read. It is utterly original in portraying a twenty-first century Jewish diaspora, with one foot in homeland America and one foot in Asia creating consumer products, and, for Wise s protagonist, with an accompanying empathy for China s grassroots aspirations. Wise comes to us fully-flighted as a master stylist and a compelling storyteller’ – Robert Olen Butler, Pulitzer Prize winner

‘Fresh and innovative, Spencer Wise’s The Emperor of Shoes is the latest addition to the tradition of young-man fiction that starts with Bellow and Roth… I’ve taught for more than forty years; this is the best first novel I’ve ever read’ – David Kirby, National Book Award Nominee

‘What a haunting and intelligent debut novel. The confident and assured prose evokes easily the beauty of the complex relationships, the ugliness of the situation in the shoe factory, and the difficulty Alex faces when deciding between following his heart and his head. Just stunning’ – Louise Beech, author of How to Be Brave, The Mountain in My Shoe and Maria in the Moon

Format: Hardcover, ebook (320 pp.)    Publisher: No Exit Press
Published: 26th July 2018                        Genre: Contemporary Fiction

Pre-order/Purchase Links*
Publisher | Amazon.co.uk ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)
*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Emperor of Shoes on Goodreads


My Review

In his praise for The Emperor of Shoes, Robert Olen Butler describes the book as ‘character-rich’ and I can’t disagree.  That doesn’t mean, however, that the characters are necessarily easy to like.

I found myself constantly shifting my view of Alex’s father, Fedor, accorded the accolade the ‘Emperor of Shoes’ (as he proudly reminds people).  One minute I felt he was merely an ambitious father trying his best to preserve the family business for his son in the face of changing market forces; the next minute, I was feeling reluctant sympathy for a pathetic, hypochondriac desperate for his son’s attention; the next minute, I was repelled by a monstrous figure up to his eyes in corruption with little or no regard for the lives of his workers.

Similarly, I started out condemning Alex for his naivety about working conditions in the factory.  How could he not have known what was going on?  Was he stupid, deliberately turning a blind eye because he couldn’t face up to the truth, or fearful of challenging his father?  However, the author skilfully takes the reader inside the mind of Alex, sharing his struggles with the difficult moral choices he faces and slowly gaining this reader’s sympathy.

Inspired by Ivy, the Chinese woman and activist with whom he forms a relationship, Alex begins to imagine making a difference to the lives of the workers in his factory.  But he faces opposition from the local state institutions built on bribes (euphemistically referred to as ‘gifts’) and corruption, personified by the malign and creepy Gang, described as ‘a Brooklyn mob boss in Mao jacket and togs’ who can make people ‘disappear with a nod of the head.’   A business proposition from Alex’s old friend, Bernie, offers the possibility of a third way but will mean taking a strikingly different path from the way his father has run the business up until now.    Does Alex have what it takes to face down ‘The Emperor of Shoes’ and start a quiet revolution?  And, if he does, will it take a greater sacrifice than he can bear?

The Emperor of Shoes made me think – and I always like that in a book.  For example, it made me question if, with a clear conscience, I could ever buy shoes made in China again without assuring myself of the working conditions in the factory.   ‘The elevator opened onto a room the size of an airplane hanger, and the dank warm air from the heat setter boxes slipped over my face like a pillow.  A boy with a Mohawk scowled at me: a stump for a right arm, severed at the elbow by the steel embossing plate on the leather grain press.  A girl, eyes jaundiced, punch-drunk, the first flush of benzene poisoning from cement glue vapors, scratched at her arm.  Everywhere, people and machines.’    A far cry from the conditions in Alex’s upmarket hotel.

The book also explores in an interesting way questions of identity.   An American by birth, Alex is nevertheless keenly aware of his Jewish and Russian heritage.  At one point, he is asked by Zhang, leader of the activist movement: “Russian, Jewish, American.  How can you be all?  Or do you pick one?”

There is real energy in the writing, along with acute observation and dark humour – for example, when Alex returns to his luxurious, air-conditioned hotel suite after a day at the factory (while the workers return to their dormitories subject to a curfew).  ‘There was a silver tray on my desk with a bottle of wine, a long stem rose in a champagne flute, a box of Godiva chocolates.  Even the gifts were a kind of mockery: here, enjoy a long sensual evening by yourself. These came courtesy of the hotel, once a week, for Ambassador level guests.  You reached Ambassador when you’d spent a good three quarters of your life on the road sleeping in their hotels.  It got passed down too, an inheritance you didn’t earn.  Death by luxury.’    

The Emperor of Shoes is an impressive debut – compelling, thought-provoking and spirited.  I, for one, can’t wait to read what the author creates next.

I received a review copy courtesy of publishers, No Exit Press, and Random Things Tours in return for an honest and unbiased review.  The Emperor of Shoes is the eighth of my 20 Books of Summer.

Follow my blog with Bloglovin


Spencer WiseAbout the Author

Spencer Wise was born in Boston in 1977.  He holds a BA from Tufts University, an MA in fiction from The University of Texas, where he was a James Michener Fellow, and a PhD in Creative Writing from Florida State University.  Wise is currently a Visiting Lecturer at Florida State University in Tallahassee, where he is at work on his second novel, Holderness.

Connect with Spencer

Website ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Goodreads

Blog Tour/Interview: The Girl in the Pink Raincoat by Alrene Hughes

The Girl in the Pink Raincoat Banner 9th JulyI’m delighted to be hosting today’s stop on the blog tour for The Girl in the Pink Raincoat by Alrene Hughes.  My thanks to Florence and Blake at Head of Zeus for inviting me to participate in the tour.

I’m thrilled to bring you a Q&A with Alrene in which she discusses, amongst other things, the surprising facts that can turn up during research for her books and the importance of the right notebook!

Follow my blog with Bloglovin


The Girl in the Pink RaincoatAbout the Book

When a factory girl and a Jewish businessman fall in love it seems that the whole world is against them.

Manchester, 1939. On the eve of war Gracie Earnshaw is working in Rosenberg’s Raincoat factory – a job she hates – but her life is about to be turned upside down when she falls in love with Jacob, the boss’s charismatic nephew.

Through Jacob, with his ambitions to be a writer, Gracie glimpses another world: theatre, music and prejudice. But their forbidden romance is cut short when Jacob is arrested and tragedy unfolds.

Gracie struggles with heartbreak, danger and old family secrets, but the love of her first sweetheart comes back to her in an unexpected way giving her the chance of a new life and happiness.

Format: Hardcover, ebook (368 pp.)    Publisher: Head of Zeus
Published: 12th July 2018                        Genre: Historical Fiction

Purchase Links*
Publisher | Amazon.co.uk  ǀ  Amazon.com  ǀ Hive.co.uk (supporting UK bookshops)*links provided for convenience, not as part of any affiliate programme

Find The Girl in the Pink Raincoat on Goodreads


Interview with Alrene Hughes, author of The Girl in the Pink Raincoat

Welcome, Alrene. Without giving too much away can you tell me a bit about The Girl in the Pink Raincoat?

It’s set in Manchester during WW2.  Gracie Earnshaw is working in Rosenberg’s Raincoat factory – a job she hates – but her life is about to be turned upside down when she falls in love with Jacob, the boss’s charismatic nephew.  Through Jacob, with his ambitions to be a writer, Gracie glimpses another world: theatre, music and prejudice. But their forbidden romance is cut short when Jacob is arrested and tragedy unfolds.  Gracie struggles with heartbreak, danger and old family secrets, but the love of her first sweetheart comes back to her in an unexpected way giving her the chance of a new life and happiness.

How did you get the idea for the story?

To begin with, I wanted to write about Manchester where I live and I like to write about WW2 because the period gives rise to a lot of drama that can change the characters’ lives. Gracie came to me very quickly, a factory girl who was good fun and loved telling stories, but there was something else about her… I knew she wouldn’t stay in the raincoat factory, but her journey had so many twists, none of which I could have envisaged when I set out to write her story.

How did you approach your research for the book? Do you enjoy the process of research?

I had already written three WW2 novels set in Belfast, where I grew up, and I learned then that thorough, well-written, non-fiction accounts of a city at war are a god-send to a novelist. Then there are the books about the home-front and cultural life in the city. Once the novel is underway the internet really comes into its own for the fine detail: what the interior of a particular dance hall looked like; what date a certain film or song came out.  Yes I do like researching, but in the end you just have to get on with writing the book!

What was the most surprising fact you came across during your research?

I came across an account of an internment camp housing enemy aliens – initially German and Austrian citizens and later Italians. The surprise was that the camp, in a disused cotton mill, was five minutes from my house! It is still standing and is now a business centre. The tragic story of the camp, and the subsequent sinking of the SS Arandora Star carrying the internees to Canada, is at the heart of the novel.

Your Martha’s Girls trilogy was also set in WW2. What attracts you to this period of history?

When I decided to write my first novel I searched for a story and took the usual advice – write about what you know. That led me to an old family scrapbook full of concert programmes, old photographs and mementoes. My mother and her sisters were talented singers in the style of the Andrews Sisters and as members of ENSA they entertained in military camps, concert and dance halls. I ended up writing a trilogy allowing the readers to see the entire war through the eyes of Martha and her daughters. What kept me going was the commitment to my family and the joy of recreating their lives, with several imaginative additions. And somewhere along the way I got hooked on the era.

When those books were finished it seemed the most natural thing to move the setting to Manchester and start again with new characters, completely fictional this time, in The Girl in the Pink Raincoat.

Do you have a favourite place to write or any writing rituals?

I’m lucky enough to have a room where I write overlooking the garden. Actually, that’s not quite true; I also spend a lot of time staring out the window wondering where on earth the story is going, then there’s the temptation to Google in the name of research, not to mention several other displacement activities. I also spend time in Greece and in the lazy afternoons I can usually write for 4-5 hours at a time with no interruptions or no internet.

I haven’t got any writing rituals, but I like to have an A4 notebook with a nice cover for each novel to work out planning, ideas for chapters, things to go back and change later, keep a daily record count…

What’s your favourite and least favourite thing about the writing process?

I love it when, in the course of writing, a sudden thought occurs to me that’s so much better than I originally intended. Often, as I write towards the end of a chapter there’s a real sense of achievement when it comes together and that full stop at the end is the time to smile and know it’s going to be fine.

Least favourite thing – when I could happily throw the laptop out of the window. That’s the time to shut it down and sleep on it. More often than not, it doesn’t look so bad in the morning.

Which authors do you admire and enjoy reading?

I read all sorts of books and don’t often go back to authors. But I would say that I’ve always liked Anita Shreve for her insight into the complexity of love. A critic described her as ‘a supremely elegant anatomist of the human heart.’ That’s the kind of book for me.

What are you working on next?

I’m working on another WW2 family saga/historical romance set in Manchester. It focuses on a young married woman who has led a sheltered life, but when her husband is killed in the blitz she has to face both grief and the need to earn a living. Circumstances lead her to join the police where she comes into contact with the harsh reality of life for women and her own longing to fall in love again.

Thank you, Alrene, for those fascinating answers to my questions.  Your many fans will be delighted to hear you’re already working on the next book.


Alrene Hughes
Photo credit: Tony Edwards

About the Author

Alrene Hughes grew up in Belfast and has lived in Manchester for most of her adult life.

She worked for British Telecom and the BBC before training as an English teacher. After teaching for twenty years, she retired and now writes full-time.

Connect with Alrene

Website  ǀ  Facebook ǀ  Twitter  ǀ  Goodreads