Reviews
Bold and brilliant…Benjamin Markovits follows Charles Dickens and Tom Wolfe in creating a vividly real urban backdrop against which a fine, provocative story can be told., Engrossing …. will call to mind recent events in Ferguson, Mo., Staten Island, N.Y., and North Charleston, S.C., among others…. Markovits writes boldly about some of our era's most important-and most delicate-subjects., Entertaining, insightful, humorous yet of serious purpose. This is a very good novel…Marnier is a fine creation., Markovits shines a much-needed light on the plight of Detroit and the racial inequalities, prejudices, and privileges that plague our nation., Markovits's prose is clean and restrained, and his ear for the way his characters speak is rarely off., You Don't Have to Live Like This takes a match to a house full of gas fumes. It made me feel like I had experienced a series of episodes I would normally only encounter via the news...a heartbreaking portrait of criminal justice., This is fiction writing that is alive in your hand…Markovits' is a voice as attuned to the soul as it is to the barrios and hoods, the kind that forms synaptic connections without ever seeming to try., An impressive new novel…Perhaps Markovits's fictional Obama, who makes the speech that gives the novel its title, is right that Americans don't have to live 'like this,' divided and distrustful, but it will take more than cheap real estate and internet utopianism to make change possible., Compelling…Markovits is a spot-on observer of speech patterns and subconsciously revealing behavioural tics, and it's the portrayal of complex relationships that keeps the plot moving. The novel is populated by intriguing characters…a bold work of fiction with a firm real-world moral., A subtle and finely poised novel…shrewdly observant…Markovits uses Detroit as a rebuke to certain forms of American idealism, and does so with nuance…Characters are gradually deepened and made complex, leaving the reader complicit in a degree of judgmental behavior., With the national media roiling with articles about race, justice and class, particularly in that struggling Michigan city, this story could not be more timely… Markovits is a master at describing the devastated and deserted streets of Detroit., "As up-to-the-minute as a cable network's "Breaking News" bulletin, though far more thoughtful and better examined…So few fiction writers deal directly with street-level economic and cultural conflict in the present day that you're grateful YOU DON'T HAVE TO LIVE LIKE THIS exists at all."