Vegas: A Memoir of a Dark Season
"'In the summer of my nervous breakdown, I went to live in Las Vegas, Clark County, Nevada.' So begins John Gregory Dunne's neglected classic of first-person writing, a mordant, deadpan, grotesque tale that blurs the line between autobiography and fiction, confession and reportage.
Panicked by his own mortality, despondent over his many failings as a writer and a man, Dunne leaves his wife and their three-year old child for the solitude of a crummy apartment off the Vegas Strip. There he plans to write an account of the city as he finds it; the book he ends up writing is 'a fiction which recalls time both real and imagined.' The remarkable central characters are Artha, a student at cosmetology college by day, a sex worker by night; Buster Mano, a private detective whose specialty is tracking down errant husbands; and Jackie Kasey, a lounge comic who opens for Elvis at $10,000 a night and wonders why he is still only a 'semi-name.' Pimps, bail bondsmen, parking-lot moguls, used-car tycoons, ex-jockeys, and women who look as if they had 'spent a lifetime meeting guys in Vegas or Miami Beach or Louisville for the Derby': these are the people who wander through the lives of Artha, Buster, and Jackie—and, for a dark season, the life of the narrator.
Contains mature themes."
John Gregory Dunne (Author), Griffin Dunne (Narrator)
Audiobook