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Black & White
 
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Black & White [Hardcover]

Lewis Shiner (Author)
4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)

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Book Description

May 23, 2008
When Michael follows his dying father to North Carolina, a lifetime of lies begins to unravel. His pursuit of his father's past--haunted by voodoo, adultery and murder--takes him to a place called Hayti, once the most prosperous black community in the South. Now the mysteries of Michael's own heritage become a matter of life and death, as racial conflicts barely restrained since the 1960s erupt again.

Rooted in the true story of the US government's urban renewal policy and its disastrous aftermath, Black & White is a literary thriller, a family saga, and a searing portrait of institutionalized hatred.

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Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Set in Durham, N.C., Shiner's powerful and affecting sixth novel (after 1999's Say Goodbye) explores civil rights, race relations and progress in that city over the past half century. In 2004, 35-year-old Michael Cooper accompanies his father, Robert, who's dying of lung cancer, and his mother, Ruth, from Texas to Durham, to honor his father's wishes and to find out more about his father's past. Michael learns about Hayti, a well-to-do black neighborhood that was demolished to make way for an expressway, uncovers an old murder and finds himself point-man in a race to prevent a much greater tragedy. Shiner weaves Michael's, Robert's and Ruth's stories into a stunning tapestry that captures the hopes, dreams, greed, bigotry, ambitions and betrayals that shaped their destinies and those of our country. While the crime plot builds to a conventional resolution, Michael's poignant discovery of his parents' roots and the splendid depiction of Durham's changing social fabric more than compensate. (June)
Copyright © Reed Business Information, a division of Reed Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

From Booklist

Set in Raleigh-Durham, Shiner’s sixth novel tracks the identity crisis of talented comics illustrator Michael Cooper. Michael has come back to North Carolina to attend his dying father, Roger. After years of feeling shut out by his family, Michael finally learns the reason why when his father confides the long and dramatic tale of his conflicted relationship with his wife and her racist family and his passionate liaison with a voodoo priestess who lived in the black section of Durham dubbed Hayti, a thriving, prosperous community that was decimated when Roger’s company constructed a highway right through its center. When Michael connects with new members of an old black power group, he learns some hard lessons not only about his own heritage but also about racial conflicts that have yet to be resolved. Shiner’s book never fully escapes the pitfalls of a political novel more invested in its message than its characters, yet it shines a light on a little-known and shameful part of America’s urban-renewal history and does so with palpable anger. --Joanne Wilkinson

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 376 pages
  • Publisher: Subterranean; 1st edition (May 23, 2008)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1596061715
  • ISBN-13: 978-1596061712
  • Product Dimensions: 9.2 x 6.4 x 1.3 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.6 pounds (View shipping rates and policies)
  • Average Customer Review: 4.8 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (5 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,701,022 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Shiner is the author of the award-winning novel GLIMPSES, now in trade paperback from Subterranean Press. Available in the same series of Definitive Editions are his novels BLACK & WHITE, DESERTED CITIES OF THE HEART, FRONTERA, SAY GOODBYE, and SLAM. Subterranean has also published his career-spanning short fiction volume, COLLECTED STORIES. Coming on August 31 is a new political thriller, DARK TANGOS. He lives in North Carolina, USA.

For more information, see www.lewisshiner.com.

 

Customer Reviews

5 Reviews
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Average Customer Review
4.8 out of 5 stars (5 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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Most Helpful Customer Reviews

10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Shades of Gray..., July 26, 2008
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This review is from: Black & White (Hardcover)
I read Lewis Shiner's Black & White with no prior knowledge of him or his previous work; the short blurb from Publisher's Weekly piqued my interest enough to warrant a purchase and I was not disappointed. It has all the elements of a great suspense and mystery novel filled with insightful observations on America's complicated views on society, identity, and race relations.

The novel opens in Durham with Michael, an introverted illustrator, attending his terminally ill father, Robert, who has chosen to return North Carolina in preparation of his death. Michael openly pleads with his father to address lifelong questions he has had regarding his conflicting birth date, and his mother's (Ruth) over-attentiveness towards his father, yet perfunctory relationship with him. When Robert decides to elicit a deathbed confession of sorts, it leads to the discovery of a body of a local, outspoken Civil Rights activist who disappeared amid controversy nearly 40 years ago. Michael soon finds himself in the midst of a murder investigation, which only ignites the curiosity of his father's clandestine past. The trail leads him down a slippery slope into the recesses of Hayti, Durham's historically African American community, once the most prosperous neighborhood in the South, envied by whites but devastated under the Urban Renewal initiatives of yesteryear. In a series of flashbacks, Shiner gives life and voice to a youthful Robert and Ruth. The reader follows Michael on a deep dark path to the truth steeped in danger. Michael learns of the mysterious magnetism of a seductive voodooienne and a host of suppressed family secrets amid the backdrop of America's racial and political pallet during the turbulent 1960s.

I learned quite a bit reading this page-turning novel, thus it entertained and educated and that makes it a winner for me. I kept turning pages, making notes in the margins to follow the mystery, and googled to find out more about events and locations mentioned therein. A great book that has made my 2008 favorites list - one that is recommended to historical fiction and/or mystery/suspense fans.

Reviewed by Phyllis
APOOO BookClub
July 25, 2008
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8 of 8 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Literary thriller, social realism at its finest!, June 18, 2008
This review is from: Black & White (Hardcover)
Whoo! Good stuff, this! Social realism, multigenerational thriller, murder mystery; whatever name you give it, it's a tale of past and present, of race, and of a man's search into his origins, all spiced with murder and a touch of voodoo.

It travels between the 1960s and 2000s through the family of Michael Cooper. 35-year-old comics illustrator Michael has come to North Carolina with his father Robert and mother Ruth to respect Robert's dying wishes that he spend his last few weeks back in Durham.

Michael is looking for answers, for a connection with his parents before it's too late. They've always seemed odd to him, and he's never felt like he belongs in his own family. As his father has only days left to live, Michael is desperate to find out the truth about his past. He can't even find a record of his birth.

Michael's past is slowly and elegantly revealed through lengthy flashbacks from his father's and mother's lives, and as he learns more about himself he gets embroiled in a very heavy present, complete with mystery family members, more race riots, and big reveals.

I was mesmerized by this book. Shiner is a master of detail and completely captures the flavor of both decades he's writing about. Political, timely, fascinating -- I can't recommend it strongly enough!!
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5 of 5 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Edge of Your Seat Reading, April 2, 2009
This review is from: Black & White (Hardcover)
I'm 48 years old and it's discouraging to know and remember that some of the worst acts of racism took place within my lifetime, the church bombing in Georgia where four little girls were murdered, Medgar Evers, the dogs of Birmingham sicced on people for nothing more than wanting to sit at a diners counter. I also have personal memories of it. A neighbor who called black people "coons," a time of blockbusters, and "changing" neighborhoods. Conversely, I also witnessed the attitudes towards it change through the work of Martin Luther King Jr, and the exposure of the blatant and outrageous attitudes and behavior of racists.

Black and White is about Michael whose father Robert is dying of lung cancer. For reasons known only to himself goes to Durham, North Carolina to die. Michael follows him and discovers that although he was born in Durham there's no birth certificate for him, and so starts the search into the mysteries of his father's past that will have reverberations and consequences in Michael's life.

Black and White tells the story of Michael and his family from their own point of view and in their own time. The story of Michael's father takes us to 1962 when he comes to Durham as a young, idealistic engineer who wants to make his mark on the world. He takes a job at an engineering firm, and he becomes intrigued by the Hyati section of Durham, the black area of the city where exists a parallel society created and enforced by segregation. Hyati offers Robert everything that's missing from his buttoned down suburban life, jazz, dancing, and love. In Hyati he meets Mercy Richards a stunningly beautiful black woman who he manages to woe and seduce, and Robert lives a parallel life of his own. Robert is already married to Ruth whose father is a powerful man in Durham white society with his status of leader of the white supremacist group The Night Riders of the Confederacy.

In his job at the engineering firm Robert is in charge of building a highway through the middle of Hyati. The residents have been assured that section that is demolished for the highway will be replaced. The powers that be in Durham, including Robert's father-in-law, have already made sure that Hyati will not be replaced. In fact, they've made plans to demolish that whole section of the city. On his forays into Hyati, Robert meets and befriends Barrett Howard, a black activist who is trying to save Hyati. When Howard goes missing we discover Robert may be involved in his murder, albeit after the fact. It is from this that all the mysteries of Robert's life and all the other stories flow.

I hope I'm not giving too much away here. When Michael discovers his real mother is black, Mr. Shiner forces us to consider the nature of race. Are you black if you have even one drop of black blood in you? Or the much better proposition, if we're all given the same respect in life we're all just people and should be seen as such. A point which I think is driven home excellently by Michael in talking about a dog "a being whose life was black and white who only had to distinguish between friends, intruders and food."

At the core of Black and White are some truths or past realities. Hyati did exist in Durham, North Carolina, it was razed in the 60's for a highway to be put through. And of course, real groups such as KKK did exist at the time, as did the racism described by Mr. Shiner which at this point of time seem to be so gross as to make one wonder how such an attitude could exist and flourish, but it did and that's what we need to be cognizant of and vigilant about.

At this point in his career I think the only writer Lewis Shiner is in competition with is, himself. Shiner has always been good at verisimilitude, being able to create a scene for the reader then put you in the scene, living with those characters and caring about them. The plot drew me in. I constantly found myself wanting to know what happens next. And found myself fully involved with the characters and like at a movie, at times I found myself having a visceral reaction to what I was reading the sense of being at the edge of my seat, racing to see what happens to the characters if they`re able to get out of the predicament they find themselves in. Black and White is larger in scope and depth of subject than Shiner's previous books, although it plays to some of the same rhythms such as estrangement from a father. As this is also a theme I've encountered in my writing that could be well attributed to the fact that the generation of my father and Mr. Shiner's came from a different world where the fathers didn't interact much with the children. Fathers went to work and provided for the family and the mothers took care of the children. Early in the book I found some of the dialogue a little clunky. It was chunky with information as if Mr. Shiner is trying to assimilate the information from his research himself but that passes quickly. At times Michael acts impulsively, doing something that just seems like it's being done to drive the action of the plot ahead and not like how a person might react in a similar situation. Sometimes I didn't agree with how the characters felt and reacted maybe that's like life people may act differently than we might expect them to. And perhaps, the characters are entitled to feel the way they do about the situations they're in. There is a rapprochement at the end that feels inauthentic to everything that has preceded it, and a little awkward in accommodating it.

I think Lewis Shiner is one of the better authors we have writing today and not only do I think you should read this book but you should also check out Mr. Shiners other books such as Glimpses, and Say Goodbye.
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