Heyday (novel) explained

Heyday
Author:Kurt Andersen
Language:English
Genre:Historical fiction
Publisher:Random House
Release Date:2014
Pages:622
Isbn:9780375504730
Pub Date:January 1, 2007
Award:David J. Langum Sr. Prize for American Historical Fiction

Heyday is a 2007 historical novel by Kurt Andersen, published by Random House. In 2008, it won the Langum Prize, awarded annually to the best work of American historical fiction.[1]

Summary

The protagonist, Ben Knowles, is from a London manufacturing family. In 1848 he experiences the disorders in Paris and then resolves to move to the United States, the 'New World,' "craving vulgarity and strangeness" (page 6). In New York he encounters Timothy Skaggs, a journalist, novelist and pioneering photographer, Duff Lucking, a fire-fighter and Mexican–American War veteran, and Duff's sister Polly, an actress and prostitute. The novel charts the characters as they journey west and participate in the California Gold Rush.

Notes and References

  1. Van Gelder, L. (2008, April 10). Footnotes. New York Times. p. 2. Last accessed Oct. 8, 2012.