Subway to California

In 1961, the Di Prisco family fled Brooklyn—and the FBI. The father was a compulsive gambler and small-time member of a crew that specialized in bookmaking. He knew too much about police corruption to stick around and break bread with federal agents who one Sunday afternoon tracked him into the woods of Long Island. He escaped at age thirty-five and ended up in a strange place called California, where his Brooklyn-born wife and two of her four sons eventually joined him. One of those sons, Joe, would be the only one in the family to graduate from high school, and he would come to make book of a different sort.

He wasn’t called to a life of crime, but the evidence is mixed. One day, Joe himself would be named the prime suspect in a federal racketeering investigation. This was somebody who, as a young man, lived as a Brother in a Roman Catholic novitiate. During Vietnam he was an activist who took over his college’s administration building. He played blackjack professionally around the world, staked by big-money backers. He managed Italian restaurants with laughable ineptitude. He also did graduate study and taught for twenty years. 

In time, though, Joe buried his unstable, manipulative, and beautiful mother and all three brothers, including his heroin-addicted younger brother. Later, Joe cares for his father as he holds on for years against the ravages of Alzheimer’s. By turns hilarious and heartbreaking, Subway to California recounts Joe’s battles with his personal demons, bargains struck with angels, and truces with his family in this richly colorful tale that reads like great fiction.

Purchase book from:

  • “A beautiful, heartfelt, sometimes funny, occasionally harrowing story of a man making his way through the minefield of his own family history. Di Prisco has lived more lives than most of us, and managed to get it all down in this riveting book.”

    — Jerry Stahl, author of Permanent Midnight and Bad Sex On Speed

  • “Brimming with humor, heartbreak, and at times the feel an old-time Catholic confessional, Subway to California is a one-of-a-kind read. Joseph Di Prisco's story evokes a time and place that is no longer part of the American landscape; a place where loyalty to family, neighborhood, and way of life was the norm. At A Great Good Place for Books we can't wait to place it in our customers' hands.”

    — Kathleen Caldwell, A Great Good Place for Books

  • “Along with Joe Di Prisco, I rode that same sweaty "Subway to California." But somehow, his was a local, with every stop an adventure: crime, passion, gambling, drugs, all the tantalizing stuff we goody-goodies missed”

    — Leah Garchik, Columnist, San Francisco Chronicle

  • “Throughout Subway, Joe Di Prisco evokes the past with vivid, often hilarious, prose, describing his Italian-Polish upbringing in Brooklyn, the flight to a strange world called California, his doomed and dramatic love affairs, and his colorful parents—the kind of parents you enjoy reading about and are grateful they were not yours.”

    — Anara Guard, author of Remedies for Hunger

  • “It's rare to encounter a book so heartfelt and compassionate and yet so incisively hilarious at the same time. Di Prisco tells a story that addresses the largest questions of family, fate, life and death, yet he grounds it all in precise, compelling detail that makes his life bloom on the page. His portrait of his mother is amazing. You could read it for this alone - but there's so much more in this treasure of a book.”

    — Heather Mackey, author of Dreamwood

  • “People struggling to find their place in the world often search for answers in a psychiatrist’s office, in love affairs, religion, illegal drugs, gambling,social activism, academia, work, and vicariously, through their children. Joseph Di Prisco visited all those places, and then, coming up short, found himself by writing a memoir.”

    — Bay Area Mercury News

  • “A heartwarming and hilarious sharing of his dysfunctional family adventures, Joe said it best when he wrote: ‘stories happen…to people who can tell them.’”

    — Ginny Prior, Town Crier, Oakland Tribune

  • “Told with enough tenderness and humor to elevate his pain-filled recollections to poetry at times, pure fun at others, Di Prisco…brings us home—grateful our family is less volatile, or feeling less alone if we, too, survived a wild childhood.”

    — Lou Fancher, Contra Costa Times

News & Media

Forward Reviews
Subway to California by Diane Prokop
Read Review

Previous
Previous

My Last Resume: New & Collected Poems 1971-1980 / 1999-2023

Next
Next

All for Now