Read Changó's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes Page 38


  In Albany I am indebted to Leon Van Dyke of the Brothers, whom I have known for forty-six years; also Brothers Earl Thorpe and the late Sam McDowell; also my old friend Peter O’Brien; the late Olivia Rorie; the late George Bunch; the late jazz pianist Jody Bolden (a.k.a. Bobby Henderson); Hank O’Neal, who salvaged Jody’s work; my legal counselor, David Duncan; Father Nellis Tremblay; the late Reverend James U. Smythe; Larry Burwell; the late Dottie Ann Kite; Jane Schneider; Michael Nardolillo; Richard Collins; my splendid researcher, Suzanne Roberson; my editor, Paul Slovak; my agent, Andrew Wylie; my perennial translator, Betsy Lopez Viglucci; and my early readers: the poet Peg Boyers, my son Brendan, and my gorgeous wife, Dana.

  ALSO BY WILLIAM KENNEDY

  FICTION

  The Ink Truck

  Legs

  Billy Phelan’s Greatest Game

  Ironweed

  Quinn’s Book

  Very Old Bones

  The Flaming Corsage

  Roscoe

  NONFICTION

  O Albany!

  Riding the Yellow Trolley Car

  WITH BRENDAN KENNEDY

  Charlie Malarkey and the Belly-Button Machine

  Charley Malarkey and the Singing Moose

 


 

  William Kennedy, Changó's Beads and Two-Tone Shoes

 


 

 
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