A tryptich of tales of crime and corruption in Harlem, from 1971 to
1976. Ray Carney, a former fence now a successful furniture salesman, is
dragged reluctantly back into the life when a bent cop from his crook
days comes asking for favors, and gets quite forceful about it. Two
years later, a firebug acquaintance of Carney's hires Pepper, a taciturn
muscle for hire, to watch over the Blaxpoitation movie he's making, and
when the movie's star goes missing, Pepper goes looking for her,
hitting the streets in his own unrelenting way until he gets the
attention of an aging crime boss. Then, in 1976, amid the bicentennial
fanfare that rings so hollow in Harlem, Carney hires Pepper to look into
an arson which hurt one of his tenants, and they end up uncovering a
wide and nasty network of corruption that puts them both in danger.
Whitehead's
range as a writer is extraordinary. During the reading of this novel I
occasionally imagined I was reading S.A. Cosby and not the erudite,
literary prose master of The Intuitionist and John Henry Days.
He's a two-time Pulitzer Prize winner, so it's no surprise that he can
inhabit a crime writer's world with ease. I did not know when I began
this book that it is a sequel seven years after Harlem Shuffle,
also about Ray Carney, which I have not read, but this novel is easily
enjoyed on its own. The capers are crackling with raw noir energy, the
Harlem is populated with a vast assortment of crooked characters with
nicknames and idiosyncratic predilections, even those who show up in
name only, and the drama and suspense come in unnerving bursts. There's
plenty of sly humor among the seedy criminality, as well: "the
flamboyant quotient in Harlem was at a record high these days, thanks to
manufacturing innovation in the synthetic-material sector, new liberal
opinions vis-à-vis the hues question, and the courageousness of the
younger generation." But it's more than just a crime novel leavened with
black humor, of course; a writer as talented as Whitehead wouldn't be
satisfied with that. It's also an examination of power and race in
America; in the background of the skull-cracking and gunplay there are
rumblings of disquiet at the injustice and power differentials that
Harlem, and America, are built on.
Sunday, December 22, 2024
Crook Manifesto
Saturday, August 24, 2024
Quiet: The Power of Introverts in a World That Can't Stop Talking
by Susan Cain
This readable and insightful book combines scientific research,
historical analysis, and personal anecdotes to make a strong case for
recognizing, accepting, and nurturing the quieter, or introverted,
personalities among us. Cain cites, among dozens of others, Jerome
Kagan's studies on temperament, which show how introverted and
extroverted traits are biologically rooted in sensitivity to stimuli,
and Anders Ericsson's research on expertise and deliberate practice,
which emphasizes the importance of sustained, focused, and — most
importantly, for this purpose — isolated effort in achieving mastery in
any field. Cain highlights this work to counter the myth that
extroverted traits like charisma and social dominance are essential for
success. She argues that introverts are not anti-social at all, but
differently social, and shows how both introverts and extroverts seek
out and are supported by different external conditions (in her metaphor,
introverts, like orchids, thrive under specific, supportive conditions
but falter in the wrong environments). She also points to historical
figures such as Rosa Parks and Mahatma Gandhi as examples of introverts
who changed the world, emphasizing the power of quiet strength.
I
liked this book's clear, firm messaging. Building off the psychological
and sociological studies, Cain has advice for work leaders, parents,
and teachers. She advises organizations to rethink open-plan offices and
team brainstorming sessions, as these often stifle introverts'
creativity. She stresses the importance of creating spaces where
independent and solo thinking is valued, citing, for example, Steve
Wozniak's hours of isolated work in making the home PC. Parents are
encouraged to respect their introverted children’s natural tendencies,
avoiding over-scheduling and teaching them that their quieter ways are a
strength rather than a flaw. For educators, Cain emphasizes the need to
avoid bias toward extroverted students in classrooms. I myself have
definitely been guilty of advising children to "talk more in class"
without trying to reframe any biases. Why see the quiet kid as shy,
someone who needs to break out of their comfort zone? Yes, they need to
engage in the world, but why not first value their wisdom in analyzing a
situation, being reflective, not just leaping in? This is an essential
shift in outlook for anyone who wants to nurture confidence in young
children. Overall, this book is an inspiring call to embrace the full
spectrum of human temperaments, offering practical strategies to empower
introverts and build more inclusive environments in homes, schools, and
workplaces.
four stars
Sunday, August 4, 2024
On Beauty
2005
In the college town of Wellington, Massachusetts, two academic families, the Belseys and the Kippses, are ideological and personal opposites whose lives become deeply intertwined. Howard Belsey is a politically liberal professor of art at Wellington College, a white Englishman married to an African-American woman. Their three children — Jerome, Zora, and Levi — grapple with their own identities and conflicts in the face of their parents' tumultuous marriage. Howard, an atheist and iconoclast, has not published recently, and brings chaos to his marriage with infidelity and his outlook which rejects the important or sacred; he seems not at home in the world. In contrast, Monty Kipps, a British-Caribbean art historian, is conservative, confident, larger than life, popular, and successful. When the oldest son, Jerome Belsey, becomes romantically involved with Monty's daughter, Victoria, an awkward entanglement of personal, political, and professional conflicts is set in motion. As the story unfolds, and minor characters flit in and out of the families' orbit, the characters confront themes of race, privilege, identity, and fidelity while struggling to reconcile their ideals with the messy realities of life.
The novel draws heavily on its academic setting, portraying the complexities of campus politics, ideological divisions, and personal hypocrisies. It's densely layered yet is a smooth, alluring read, has a mordant wit, and the prose style is beautiful. It won the Orange Prize, was nominated for the Booker, and ended up on countless Best of the Year lists. Smith acknowledges an explicit comparison to E.M. Forster's Howard's End in both its plot and its concern with human relationships, but I haven't read that novel, so perhaps I'm missing something. I very much enjoyed reading it, and I think Smith is an excellent communicator of complex subjects. I liked especially the critiques of intellectualism's failings regarding the hard realities of the world, and the nuanced depiction of race, especially Kiki's experiences as a non-academic black woman in a white man's academic world. I was put off, somewhat, by the overstuffed narrative, with its many subplots and secondary characters vying for attention. I am also the type of reader who seeks some form of closure to be fully satisfied, and this novel, essentially a slice of life, albeit a complex one, begins in media res and ends with all possibilities open. In sum, this is a masterfully-written work that I enjoyed reading, but upon completing it, I felt a bit let down, as if I'd had a whirlwind dance with someone I can now no longer find.
four stars
Friday, July 26, 2024
Nod
One day, without explanation, everyone on Earth loses the ability to
sleep. Everyone, that is, except a select few, perhaps one in a
thousand, who still can recharge their bodies and minds. Paul, a writer
of books on etymology, is one such lucky soul. Tanya, his girlfriend, is
not. In a maximum of four weeks, the Awakened will die, their bodies
and brains taxed to the maximum. But before that happens, civilization
will collapse and millions of people who start to get very desperate,
erratic, and insane. Paul finds that his latest, unpublished work, Nod,
has fallen into the hands of a charismatic nutcase who leads a band of
followers, and he tries to navigate a tricky line between placating the
horde who see him as a prophet and saying the wrong thing and being
martyred by madmen. And then there's the tricky problem of the children
he wants to save...
This is a wonderfully eerie apocalyptic
nightmare scenario. It's such a simple idea, but so open to horrible
possibilities. A world of brainless zombies is one thing; a world of
cunning, crazed, sleep-deprived iconoclasts, jealous and suspicious of
your ability to sleep, is something rather more frightening. At least
you know where you stand with zombies. The book is a quick read, with a
taut, heavy atmosphere of dread, and depictions of real cruelty,
leavened slightly by Paul's expounding on interesting old words and
ruminations about what life, in the regular old world, was really about.
Barnes isn't interested in "hard science fiction" ideas about what in
reality cause such a doomsday scenario or why some might be unaffected;
this is more in the way of speculative apocalyptic horror with an
faintly optimistic outlook. Sadly, Barnes died of a rare cancer right
after publishing this book, so we'll never know what other gems he might
have written.
four stars
Saturday, July 20, 2024
The Ministry of Time
In a near-future London, the protagonist (who is never named) takes on a
government job about which she is told nothing. It turns out that the
UK has discovered the secret of time travel (from the past to the future
only), and our protagonist is hired to be a "bridge" to the present for
her charge, a man from the Navy presumed dead in 1847. This is
real-life Commander Graham Gore, who perished in the infamous Franklin
expedition. Along with the other bridges and time-displaced persons she
teaches her expat about such soul-shaking Spotify, the looser morals of
the age, and the end of the British Empire. Gore takes it all calmly, considering, and soon he and the bridge (called "little cat" as a pet
name by Gore) find themselves falling in love. But there are a lot of
secrets that Little Cat is yet to discover about the Ministry; clearly,
the government has an ulterior motive in using time travel, and soon she
and Gore are in grave danger.
I enjoyed how the novel explores
the consequences of defying history, and I loved the characters from
diverse eras, especially the spunky 17th century farm girl and the
quiet, guilt-ridden homosexual from 1916. Key themes include colonialism
(the author is of Cambodian descent, and her characters have diverse
backgrounds and perspectives), climate change, generational trauma, and
complex identities, all handled with a mix of historical realism and
humor. All good so far. However, I personally am not into romance novels
at all, and this is easily a romance novel as much as a science fiction
or speculative novel. I found this subplot frankly boring. Then, too, I
am never patient with characters who don't see the obvious; when, for
example, Little Cat hears about an obviously futuristic weapon in the
Ministry, she dismisses it utterly as a mistake, despite the fact that,
well, she just learned that time travel is possible, right? I felt as
though the book never really got itself fully together; I liked how Gore
adapted to the present, but the secrets and subplots that followed felt
rushed and unsatisfying to me. The book was overlong, tedious in its
pacing in some parts, and rushed in others. Alternating chapters which
tell what happened to Gore in the past are not particularly interesting
and have no bearing on how he acts or thinks in the present. And, as a
minor gripe, the author relies way too much on metaphors, some rather
silly. A good editor probably could have made this book more readable,
but as it is, I was disappointed and often put it down out of boredom.
Sunday, January 7, 2024
The Thursday Murder Club
by Richard Osman
Joyce, a recent resident of an upscale retirement home, is invited to
join the Thursday Murder Club, a group of three other pensioners.
Elizabeth, a woman whose past hints at secret service work, Ron, a
former union leader, and Ibrahim, a retired psychiatrist, like to go
over police cold cases as a hobby. When the local greedy yuppie land
developer's right hand man turns up dead, the four unlikely but still
sharp amateur detectives are excited to take on a current case. Managing
to get into the reluctant good graces of the actual police
investigating the case, they make good progress, but when more bodies
start turning up, things get really complicated.
This debut
mystery captivated me instantly. It's witty, fast-paced, full of twists
and turns and red herrings, and had a large cast of endearing characters
with their own quirks and secrets. Extremely clever, genuinely funny,
and even poignant at times, when it discusses loss, friendship or death.
The authorial choice to alternate between one first-person narrator
(Joyce) and a third-person narrator that keeps things teasingly
ambiguous is original and fun. The characters are vivid and the plot is
dizzying. It just might be a five-star book, but I ding it one star for
"cheating" the reader by using previously unknown information to reveal
one of the mysteries (oh yes, there's more than one whodunit here). I
may say this a lot, but I really do want to read more of this sly,
moving, lively series.