"The Given Day" (2008)

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The Given Day is a historical novel published in 2008 by American author Dennis Lehane, set primarily in Boston during 1918 and the subsequent Boston Police Strike of 1919. The 704-page work marked a significant departure from Lehane's crime fiction, encompassing a panoramic examination of Boston's social, political, and labor history during the World War I era. It is the first book in what became the Coughlin family trilogy, followed by Live by Night (2012) and World Gone By (2015). The novel weaves together multiple narrative perspectives across Boston's diverse neighborhoods and social strata, from the tenements of Irish immigrant communities to the mansions of Brahmin elites, while addressing themes of class struggle, revolutionary ideology, racial tension, and personal redemption. Published by William Morrow, an imprint of HarperCollins, The Given Day received strong critical attention upon its release and expanded Lehane's readership considerably beyond his established fan base in genre crime fiction.[1]

Plot

The novel follows two central characters whose lives intersect against the backdrop of Boston's labor crisis. Danny Coughlin is an Irish-American Boston police officer, the son of a well-connected police captain, who becomes drawn into the organizing efforts of his fellow officers as they push to unionize through affiliation with the American Federation of Labor. Danny's loyalties are tested repeatedly: by his father's staunch opposition to the union, by his romantic relationship with a woman his family doesn't approve of, and by his undercover assignment infiltrating radical labor and anarchist cells in the city. His arc tracks the full arc of the police strike, from the early grievances through the catastrophic walkout and its violent aftermath.

Luther Laurence is a young Black man from Tulsa, Oklahoma, who arrives in Boston after a violent confrontation forces him to flee his home. Luther finds work with the Coughlin family and, separately, with the local chapter of the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People, where he encounters figures working to build Black political and civic power in the face of systemic racism. His chapters provide the novel's most direct engagement with race in America, running parallel to Danny's labor story and connecting the Boston setting to the broader national landscape of what would become the Red Summer of 1919.

Babe Ruth also appears as a recurring character during his final season with the Boston Red Sox, including the 1918 World Series. Lehane uses Ruth's presence to ground the novel in a specific cultural moment and to explore celebrity, ambition, and the transience of belonging. Ruth's portrayal is fictional but draws on the documented record of his time in Boston before his sale to the New York Yankees in January 1920. The three narrative threads converge as the police strike reaches its crisis point in September 1919, forcing nearly every character to choose sides in a conflict that reshaped Boston and brought national attention to Massachusetts Governor Calvin Coolidge.

Characters

Danny Coughlin serves as the novel's primary protagonist. A third-generation Irish-American cop, he's caught between loyalty to his father's world and the genuine suffering of the officers he works alongside. His father, Captain Thomas Coughlin, is a powerful figure within the department, a man whose pragmatism and connections insulate him from the economic desperation that drives the rank and file. The tension between Danny and his father runs through the entire novel and gives the labor conflict its personal, generational dimension.

Luther Laurence is Danny's counterpart and, in many respects, the novel's moral center. His perspective exposes the limits of the labor movement's solidarity, which doesn't extend across the color line in 1919 Boston. Luther's chapters are often the novel's most urgent. He carries the weight of a country that won't protect him, working alongside people who benefit from his labor while refusing to treat him as an equal.

Calvin Coolidge and Police Commissioner Edwin Upton Curtis appear as significant historical figures whose decisions shape the plot's resolution. Coolidge's declaration during the strike, that there is no right to strike against the public safety by anybody, anywhere, anytime, became nationally famous and helped launch his political career toward the vice presidency and eventually the presidency. Curtis, inflexible and resistant to any recognition of police unionism, is portrayed as the institutional obstacle the striking officers cannot move.

History

The novel is grounded in events that shaped Boston in the early twentieth century, particularly the labor unrest and social upheaval that followed World War I. Lehane conducted extensive research into the Boston Police Strike of September 1919, one of the most significant labor actions in American history, in which approximately 1,136 of Boston's 1,544 police officers abandoned their posts in protest against low wages, poor working conditions, and the department's refusal to recognize their union. The work uses this historical framework as both backdrop and central narrative driver, examining how the strike affected individuals across Boston's social hierarchy and how the events of 1918 to 1919 reflected broader tensions in American society regarding labor rights, immigration, national identity, and the relationship between government and its citizens.

Lehane's research drew on primary source materials including contemporary newspaper accounts from the Boston Globe, archival records housed in Boston's public libraries and historical societies, and academic historical texts examining the strike and its context. Francis Russell's A City in Terror: Calvin Coolidge and the 1919 Boston Police Strike (1975) is among the scholarly works that documented the mechanics of the walkout in detail. Lehane incorporated specific historical figures and events into his fictional narrative, including Curtis, Coolidge, and the actual recruitment and deployment of the Massachusetts State Guard to restore order during the strike period. The novel presents these historical elements through the eyes of fictional characters whose lives intersect with and are shaped by these larger forces, creating a layered narrative that explores both public events and private emotional consequences. Lehane has noted in the novel's author's note that he began the project after years of research convinced him that the strike offered a prism through which to examine nearly every fault line in American life: race, class, immigration, and the limits of democratic solidarity.[2]

The 1918 influenza pandemic also runs through the novel's early sections, as does the climate of political fear surrounding anarchist bombings and radical labor movements. The Red Summer of 1919, during which white mob violence erupted against Black communities across the country, forms the threatening national context for Luther Laurence's chapters. Lehane connects Boston's local labor crisis to this wider national unraveling, arguing through the novel's structure that none of these events happened in isolation.

Culture

The Given Day functions as a cultural document of Boston during a transformative period, capturing the city's ethnic composition, social divisions, and cultural tensions of the early twentieth century. The novel provides detailed depictions of Boston's Irish-American community, which by 1918 had become a dominant political and social force, as well as the experiences of Italian, Polish, and other European immigrant groups who populated the city's working-class neighborhoods. Lehane's portrayal emphasizes their internal diversity, economic struggles, and the varying ideological responses to labor exploitation, from pragmatic unionism to revolutionary socialism and anarchism. The novel also depicts the discrimination faced by African Americans in Boston and the cultural institutions and social networks through which they maintained community and dignity despite systemic marginalization.

Baseball runs through the novel as a cultural throughline. The 1918 World Series, which the Red Sox won, provides a moment of collective Boston identity that cuts across class and ethnic lines, at least briefly. Lehane uses Ruth's scenes partly to explore what public spectacle does in a city under economic pressure: it offers escape without resolution.

Religious institutions feature prominently, particularly the Catholic Church's central role in Irish-American life. The novel shows the tensions between traditional religious values and modern secular ideologies including socialism and anarchism, tensions that were deeply real in 1919 Boston, where Cardinal O'Connell's influence shaped the political and cultural instincts of the immigrant Catholic working class. Through these cultural elements, Lehane constructs a picture of Boston society as a space of significant contest, where different communities developed distinct responses to modernity and industrialization.[3]

Economy

The economic conditions depicted in The Given Day provide essential context for understanding the novel's central conflict. Boston's economy in 1918 to 1919 was marked by significant inflation following American entry into World War I, which eroded the real wages of working people even as nominal compensation held steady or rose slightly. The police officers at the center of the novel's plot earned approximately $21.50 per week, a sum that contemporary accounts and historical analysis indicate was insufficient to support families in Boston's high-cost housing market. The novel details the economic desperation of working-class life: inadequate housing, food insecurity, and the constant calculation of families attempting to meet basic needs on wages that hadn't kept pace with wartime prices.

Beyond police labor conditions, the novel explores Boston's broader economic structure as a port city and manufacturing center. Its prosperity was built on immigrant labor, but its wealth was concentrated among a relatively small class of established business and financial interests. The disparities between the comfortable circumstances of Boston's Brahmin class, whose assets often derived from earlier eras of commercial and maritime dominance, and the precarious situations of the workers who sustained the city's economy, give the novel much of its moral energy. Economic desperation, Lehane shows, drives individuals toward varying ideological positions. Some characters embrace conservative unionism. Others drift toward radical movements. The economic logic of the strike isn't simply about wages; it's about whether the city's working class can claim any dignity within the system at all.

Reception

The Given Day received broadly positive reviews upon publication in October 2008. Michiko Kakutani, reviewing the novel for the New York Times, praised Lehane's ambition and his ability to render the period's social texture, while noting that the novel's scale occasionally works against its momentum. The novel was recognized as a significant step in Lehane's evolution as a writer, demonstrating that the skills he had developed in his Kenzie-Gennaro crime series, particularly his command of Boston's neighborhoods and voices, translated effectively into historical fiction on a larger canvas.

The book was a finalist for several literary awards following publication. Its combination of popular accessibility and historical seriousness made it a frequent point of reference in discussions of contemporary American historical fiction, and it introduced Lehane to readers who had not followed his earlier crime novels. Sales were strong enough to establish the Coughlin family as a continuing fictional project, leading Lehane to continue the saga with Live by Night in 2012, which won the Edgar Award for Best Novel from the Mystery Writers of America, and World Gone By in 2015.[4]

Notable References

The Given Day references multiple aspects of Boston's historical significance and geographic identity, grounding its narrative within the city's specific landscape. The novel depicts recognizable Boston locations including the Scollay Square area, the Hanover Street district of the North End, Beacon Hill and its social contrasts, South Boston's working-class streets, and the Charles River district. The novel's engagement with specific Boston landmarks and neighborhoods authenticates its historical setting and emphasizes how the events of 1918 to 1919 affected different parts of the city in distinct ways. References to the Boston Police Department's structure, command hierarchy, and specific precincts ground the novel's police narratives in historical reality.

The novel also positions itself within a tradition of Boston-based literature that extends from earlier works by authors such as Edwin O'Connor to contemporary crime fiction. By anchoring its narrative in specific historical events and locations, the novel shows how local histories connect to larger American narratives of labor, immigration, war, and social change. Boston here isn't merely a setting. It's an argument: that what happened in this city in 1919 revealed something essential and unresolved about the American promise, and that the fault lines exposed then didn't close when the strike ended.[5]