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Editorial Content for The Exceptions

Contributors

Reviewer (text)

Joe Hartlaub

David Cristofano’s THE EXCEPTIONS is much more than a fine sophomore effort. His debut novel, THE GIRL SHE USED TO BE, won critical accolades that included an Edgar Award nomination. It told the story of a young lady named Melody Grace McCartney who, at six years of age and in the company of her parents, wandered into the wrong place at the wrong time and inadvertently witnessed an act of unspeakable violence. That incident resulted in Melody and her parents being placed in the Federal Witness Protection Program and changing locales and names the way other families change jobs and cars. Melody’s parents ultimately lost their lives as the result of a monumental error, but Melody continued in the program, fashioning a life under a series of different identities until a mysterious young man approached her and offered her a different choice.

"What Cristofano has done is create a dark and exceptional anti-hero, one whose actions in general can be neither excused nor condoned, yet who has a core of decency, however small, that may in the end save his soul. Or not."

THE EXCEPTIONS shows a different version of those events. It was Jonathan Bovaro’s father, a crime lord, who committed the violent act that Melody and her parents witnessed, and it was Jonathan who, as a young boy, saw the family flee the scene of the incident and provide the identification that ultimately enabled his family to trace Melody and her family, and thus place them in mortal danger over the course of decades. Yet it is Jonathan who has been haunted by Melody’s face --- her very existence --- across the years that stretch from childhood to adolescence to adulthood. Jonathan is aware of one simple truth: if he had kept his silence on that fateful Sunday morning when his father committed the heinous crime that was witnessed by the McCartneys, Melody’s parents would be alive and she never would have been placed in danger. What Jonathan resolves, not by words so much as by actions, is that he will protect her even as he ironically becomes her pursuer.

However, something has to give at some point. And Jonathan is not an angel by any means. He jockeys for position within his crime family and, in most cases, does that which is expected of him. There is but this one assignment --- Melody --- that can never be completed. What Cristofano has done is create a dark and exceptional anti-hero, one whose actions in general can be neither excused nor condoned, yet who has a core of decency, however small, that may in the end save his soul. Or not.

THE GIRL SHE USED TO BE and THE EXCEPTIONS are complete in and of themselves, yet almost demand to be read together. The former is probably best read first --- following the order in which Cristofano wrote the books --- with the latter being read immediately afterward. If it’s THE GIRL SHE USED TO BE that tugs you into the occasionally violent story of this erstwhile love affair, it's THE EXCEPTIONS that lifts and removes the occasional veil behind the parts of the story not related in THE GIRL SHE USED TO BE. Reading either, though, will whet your appetite for the other, as well as for future efforts by this extremely talented author.

Teaser

 

The son of a prominent mobster needs to kill the woman whose testimony can put his father in prison, but he can't bring himself to do it. Rather than end her life, he decides that he will make it his duty to protect her. It isn’t long before he finds his mind and his heart more and more devoted to her.

Promo

The son of a prominent mobster needs to kill the woman whose testimony can put his father in prison, but he can't bring himself to do it. Rather than end her life, he decides that he will make it his duty to protect her. It isn’t long before he finds his mind and his heart more and more devoted to her.

About the Book

No loose ends. It's the Bovaro family motto. As part of the Bovaro clan, one of the most powerful and respected families in organized crime, Jonathan knows what he must do: take out Melody Grace McCartney, the woman whose testimony can lock up his father and disgrace his entire family. The only problem: he can't bring himself to do it.

Had Jonathan kept his silence, Melody and her parents would never have been identified and lured into the Witness Protection Program, able to run but never to hide. So he keeps her safe the only way he knows how --- by vowing to clean up his own mess while acting as her shield.

But as he watches her take on another new identity in yet another new town, becoming a beautiful but broken woman, Jonathan can't get her out of his mind...or his heart. From the streets of Little Italy to a refuge that promises a fresh start, Jonathan will be forced to choose between the life he's always known, the destiny his family has carved out for him, and a future unlike anything he's ever imagined.