PRO CONNECT
I came to writing at a very early age, using slow times in math and science way back in junior high to start writing short stories, much to the consternation of my teachers. I have always believed that there is magic in the written word.
I spent most of my working life as a pilot wandering the globe for such diverse organizations as the Saudi royal family, several airlines large and small, including six years as a DC-10 Captain at Japan Air Lines, and even Hustler Magazine. After all that, and some serious injuries from a car crash, I wound up in Budapest with my wife and two small children. We went there from Hawaii, so you can imagine the change! Barbara ran a network of radio stations throughout central Europe, and I played guitar in some blues bands and ran a world famous blues club.....and wrote.
“Brill's promising debut collection enjoyably navigates the streets and the heart of the Hungarian capital... elegantly written.”
– Kirkus Reviews
Brill’s promising debut collection of short stories enjoyably navigates the streets and the heart of the Hungarian capital.
All the central characters of these stories seek direction, including a widower who’s traveled to Budapest to learn to play jazz, a librarian who’s become disconnected from the world, and a secret policeman who struggles to comprehend post-communist Hungary. The ever present chaos of the capital’s traffic encircles them as they attempt to carve routes through their own lives. The opening, first-person story, “Taxi!,” is written with such honest fluidity that readers may be fooled into mistaking it for autobiography. In it, San Franciscan Allan Simmons is on a mission to rediscover life after the death of his spouse. He hopes to achieve this by learning to play jazz piano but finds difficulty integrating into a city where he speaks little of the language and struggles to bridge the cultural gap. By chance, he meets Tibor, a taxi driver and fellow jazz aficionado, which allows him to experience the true embrace of Hungarian hospitality. It’s by far the standout story of an emotionally insightful, rewarding collection. In the elegantly written, sad, and charming tale “Getting Lost,” Maria, a lonely librarian, is unnerved by the sudden arrival of a mysterious gentleman who courts her attention. “Bullies,” about Lsazlo Hajdu, an ice-cold former member of the secret police, recalls communist Hungary’s atmosphere of intimidation and suspicion and considers how such ideologies linger on in the present. The author captures the vibrant hum of the city and revels in playing the flâneur, keenly observing the populated streets with brio: “I walked down streets I had never been on before...through pretty little squares with children playing...past a music school and listened to the sound of violins filling the air.” Overall, the collection is stylistically reminiscent of Paul Auster’s short stories, and it’s a must for anyone interested in Budapest.
Moving, descriptive, and seductive urban tales.
Pub Date: Oct. 16, 2015
Page count: 232pp
Publisher: CreateSpace
Review Posted Online: Dec. 11, 2015
Kirkus Reviews Issue: Jan. 15, 2016
Day job
Retired airline captain now part time home inspector
Favorite author
Vonnegut
Favorite book
Slaughterhouse 5
Hometown
Army brat... no home town
Passion in life
My children... and flying
Unexpected skill or talent
Love to play the Blues on my guitar
Driving In Budapest: STORIES OF LOSS AND LOVE, HOPE AND DESPAIR...ABOUT LIFE: Named to Kirkus Reviews' Best Books, 2016
Driving In Budapest: STORIES OF LOSS AND LOVE, HOPE AND DESPAIR...ABOUT LIFE: Kirkus Star
Driving In Budapest: STORIES OF LOSS AND LOVE, HOPE AND DESPAIR...ABOUT LIFE: "Kirkus' Indie Books of the Month Selection", 2016
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