I'm frequently fascinated by the irony that occurs in life. I, a pro-capitalism conservative, edited my friend Bob Rubenstein's The White Bridge, which is in large part an anti-capitalism screed. Now Bob, an ultra-liberal, has written a glowing review of Killing, a novel at the opposite end of the spectrum. Here it is:
I knew Dante the first moment he hugged his son but was skittish about  doing it, as men often are. His son, Junior is going off to the Gulf  War, and the father is choking on the inside cause he knows about  combat. He knows about Nam. We are not told about the killings there.  You see, that begins the beauty of Vic Fortezza's novel. Amid all the  words, it is Dante's silence that holds us with a fist of menace. We  know from the beginning, this man is wound too tight. He is coiled and  G-d Forbid Junior does not come back home.
Yes, I know Dante. He was  from the other side of the street where I grew up to be safe. I mean,  being white was a blessing in our Brooklyn neighborhood. It was always  harder to be Black. Dante's son knew the gang that attacked and murdered  Yusef Hawkins. We expected and got only belts in the mouth, a whack in  the gut, a kick in the ass. But they let us live if we obeyed the law of  the streets, the territories staked out between the bowling alleys and  the pizza joints.
Killing is Saturday Night Fever on steroids.
By  that I mean, it has left me undone. The novel brings back a divisive  time and guilt I never thought I owned. You see, I was on the other side  of the street, deferred, crazy; seeing spirits, hearing voices during  the hearing test. "Hell no, we won't go."
But you know, there were  Dantes.Though he says stuff that is repugnant to me, he has a case. He  is from the other side and hates our protest as much as we hated the  war. It was a soldier's prerogative.
Tonight, I recalled a real  soldier who came home from the war, as silent as Dante. He was my  childhood friend. Wally came to visit me during a protest rally in  Brooklyn. He said nothing, and I said nothing to him. I did not know  where or what he had done in Nam. He wasn't telling and I wasn't asking.  It was the last time we spoke until tonight.
As Dante tears at my  heartstrings, though, I softened my position and felt profound guilt I  had not known I carried from that last conversation with my childhood  friend. The difference gave him the right to wear Vietnam Veteran caps  and does not allow us to wear Vietnam protestor caps. It gives those  like him who served the right to have fifty thousand names on the  Washington wall. Not one protestor, I believe, is so honored,except in a  little place likewise revered:Kent State. There was, you know, a  massacre there, but the soldiers finally have the field and the final  word.
Still, it is so shocking to hear them mouth their words of  derision at us, but the beauty of Vic Fortezza is to make the mundane  speak to us in a common voice of humanity.Husbands and wives breathe  with eternal, even heroic life.
This is more than a good read.  The dialogue is too real, shocking, to be a play. Look, I am not no  mammaluke, no sfacheem. I don't know why this extraordinary novel has  taken so long to see the light of day. But I am convinced it is so real  in its dialogue that resonates such truths as to make Killing a visceral  explosion.
Tonight I spoke to my childhood friend, Wally W., whom I  did not talk to for fifty years and I said, "I'm sorry," for not  understanding his right to be silent. Vic Fortezza has given voice to an  era of silence, cowardice and heroism. His amazing gifts bring us a  common humanity; the shared affective suffering of our mixed-up  generation.
I thank Herbie and Mr. Almost, who braved the stiff Northeast wind to buy books today.
Read Vic's stories, free: http://members.tripod.com/vic_fortezza/Literature/
 
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