Red Fog
Jimmy Dependra, a writer living on Manhattan's Lower East Side, is obsessed with the mysteries of sex and death as he researches how the city's underground history was transformed by the telegraph and transatlantic cable, the latter invented by Cyrus Field in Gramercy Park.

He is introduced to Berenice Chawters, a feisty ninety-three year old former courtesan who has lived there for over sixty years and inherited a large portion of the Atlantic Cable Company fortune, and she shares with him her unusual lifetime's experiences.

Then, cruising Stuyvesant Park late one night, he encounters a dark stranger who turns out to be Dr. Neelem Blegg, a professor of criminology and forensics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, who he discovers is also knowledgeable about Cesare Lombroso, the famous 19th century Italian psychiatrist and pioneering criminologist who was a scientific precursor of Freud. They realize Lombroso has a surprising contemporary relevance and this catalyzes their relationship. Jimmy moves through a labyrinth of unusual intrigues that refocuses the case of a murdered hermaphrodite hooker and her killer that reveals parallels between writing and detection, criminology and crypt-ology. Red Fog is a darkly illuminating roman à clef that probes the city's taboo underside as it explores intertwining reflections connecting the living and dead. It culminates on September 11, 2001, after the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center.

"The book explores the seamy underbelly of society, which can certainly capture the imagination... unique, well-crafted characters... A weighty meditation on the past, sexuality, and criminality..." Kirkus Reviews
1122637520
Red Fog
Jimmy Dependra, a writer living on Manhattan's Lower East Side, is obsessed with the mysteries of sex and death as he researches how the city's underground history was transformed by the telegraph and transatlantic cable, the latter invented by Cyrus Field in Gramercy Park.

He is introduced to Berenice Chawters, a feisty ninety-three year old former courtesan who has lived there for over sixty years and inherited a large portion of the Atlantic Cable Company fortune, and she shares with him her unusual lifetime's experiences.

Then, cruising Stuyvesant Park late one night, he encounters a dark stranger who turns out to be Dr. Neelem Blegg, a professor of criminology and forensics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, who he discovers is also knowledgeable about Cesare Lombroso, the famous 19th century Italian psychiatrist and pioneering criminologist who was a scientific precursor of Freud. They realize Lombroso has a surprising contemporary relevance and this catalyzes their relationship. Jimmy moves through a labyrinth of unusual intrigues that refocuses the case of a murdered hermaphrodite hooker and her killer that reveals parallels between writing and detection, criminology and crypt-ology. Red Fog is a darkly illuminating roman à clef that probes the city's taboo underside as it explores intertwining reflections connecting the living and dead. It culminates on September 11, 2001, after the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center.

"The book explores the seamy underbelly of society, which can certainly capture the imagination... unique, well-crafted characters... A weighty meditation on the past, sexuality, and criminality..." Kirkus Reviews
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Red Fog

Red Fog

by Kenneth King
Red Fog

Red Fog

by Kenneth King

eBook

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Overview

Jimmy Dependra, a writer living on Manhattan's Lower East Side, is obsessed with the mysteries of sex and death as he researches how the city's underground history was transformed by the telegraph and transatlantic cable, the latter invented by Cyrus Field in Gramercy Park.

He is introduced to Berenice Chawters, a feisty ninety-three year old former courtesan who has lived there for over sixty years and inherited a large portion of the Atlantic Cable Company fortune, and she shares with him her unusual lifetime's experiences.

Then, cruising Stuyvesant Park late one night, he encounters a dark stranger who turns out to be Dr. Neelem Blegg, a professor of criminology and forensics at John Jay College of Criminal Justice, who he discovers is also knowledgeable about Cesare Lombroso, the famous 19th century Italian psychiatrist and pioneering criminologist who was a scientific precursor of Freud. They realize Lombroso has a surprising contemporary relevance and this catalyzes their relationship. Jimmy moves through a labyrinth of unusual intrigues that refocuses the case of a murdered hermaphrodite hooker and her killer that reveals parallels between writing and detection, criminology and crypt-ology. Red Fog is a darkly illuminating roman à clef that probes the city's taboo underside as it explores intertwining reflections connecting the living and dead. It culminates on September 11, 2001, after the terrorist attack on the World Trade Center.

"The book explores the seamy underbelly of society, which can certainly capture the imagination... unique, well-crafted characters... A weighty meditation on the past, sexuality, and criminality..." Kirkus Reviews

Product Details

BN ID: 2940150805446
Publisher: Club Lighthouse Publishing
Publication date: 09/10/2015
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
File size: 614 KB

About the Author

Kenneth King is the author of Writing in Motion: Body—Language—Technology published by Wesleyan University Press (2003), most of which can be accessed at Google Books His writings have appeared in The Paris Review, The Chicago Review, Hotel Amerika, /nor (New Ohio Review), Art & Cinema, Topoi: An International Review of Philosophy, Shantih: The Literature of Soho, Movement Research Performance Journal, PLJ/Performing Arts Journal, Semiotext(e), Film Culture, Soho Weekly News, Gay and Lesbian Journal Worldwide, Dance Magazine, File, eddy, Ballet Review, Panache, and in the anthologies Footnotes: Six Choreographers Inscribe the Page, Merce Cunningham: Dancing in Space and Time, The Young American Writers, The New American Arts, Text-Sound Texts, Further Steps: Fifteen Choreographers on Modern Dance, Further Steps 2: Fourteen Choreographers on What’s the R.A.G.E. in Modern Dance, and The New American Cinema.

King also has a history as a multimedia dance artist who has performed throughout the US and in Europe. He has received fellowships from the John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation and National Endowment for the Arts, and was awarded a “Bessie” New York Performance Award for/Sustained Achievement, which he declined to protest the Iraq War. He has taught in numerous universities and colleges and has appeared in the films of Andy Warhol, Jonas Mekas, Gregory Markopoulos, Michael Blackwood, and in Robyn Brentano and Andrew Horn’s movie Space City. He is a graduate of Antioch College and lives in New York City.
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