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Grand River and Joy (Sweetwater Fiction: Originals)
 
 
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Grand River and Joy (Sweetwater Fiction: Originals) [Hardcover]

Susan Messer (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)


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Book Description

0472116991 978-0472116997 July 1, 2009 1ST

"With unsparing candor, Susan Messer thrusts us into a time when racial tensions sundered friends and neighbors and turned families upside down. The confrontations in Grand River and Joy are complex, challenging, bitterly funny, and---painful though it is to acknowledge it---spot-on accurate."
---Rosellen Brown, author of Before and After and Half a Heart

"Grand River and Joy is a rare novel of insight and inspiration. It's impossible not to like a book this well-written and meaningful---not to mention as historically significant, humorous, and meditative."
---Laura Kasischke, author of The Life Before Her Eyes and Be Mine

Halloween morning 1966, Harry Levine arrives at his wholesale shoe warehouse to find an ethnic slur soaped on the front window. As he scavenges around the sprawling warehouse basement, looking for the supplies he needs to clean the window, he makes more unsettling discoveries: a stash of Black Power literature; marijuana; a new phone line running off his own; and a makeshift living room, arranged by Alvin, the teenaged tenant who lives with his father, Curtis, above the warehouse. Accustomed to sloughing off fears about Detroit's troubled inner-city neighborhood, Harry dismisses the soaped window as a Halloween prank and gradually dismantles “Alvin's lounge” in a silent conversation with the teenaged tenant. Still, these events and discoveries draw him more deeply into the frustrations and fissures permeating his city in the months leading up to the Detroit riots.

Grand River and Joy, named after a landmark intersection in Detroit, follows Harry through the intersections of his life and the history of his city. It's a work of fiction set in a world that is anything but fictional, a novel about the intersections between races, classes and religions exploding in the long, hot summers of Detroit in the 1960s. Grand River and Joy is a powerful and moving exploration of one of the most difficult chapters of Michigan history.

Susan Messer's fiction and nonfiction have appeared in numerous publications, including Glimmer Train Stories, North American Review, and Colorado Review. She received an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship in prose, an Illinois Arts Council literary award for creative nonfiction, and a prize in the Jewish Cultural Writing Competition of the Dora Teitelboim Center for Yiddish Culture.

Cover photograph copyright © Bill Rauhauser and Rauhauser Photographic Trust



Product Details

  • Hardcover: 240 pages
  • Publisher: University of Michigan Press; 1ST edition (July 1, 2009)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 0472116991
  • ISBN-13: 978-0472116997
  • Product Dimensions: 9.1 x 6.2 x 1 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 1.1 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (12 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,351,072 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

Susan Messer has had fiction and nonfiction published in Glimmer Train Stories, North American Review, Colorado Review, Creative Nonfiction, Fourth Genre, Another Chicago Magazine, killingthebuddha.com, Lost, and others. Awards include an Illinois Arts Council Fellowship in prose, an Illinois Arts Council literary award for creative nonfiction, and prizes in Moment magazine's short fiction competition, Chicago Public Radio's Stories on Stage competition, and the Jewish Cultural Writing Competition of the Center for Yiddish Culture. She has had two residencies at Ragdale, an arts colony, and been a finalist in the Chicago Tribune's Nelson Algren competition, the Writers@Work fellowship competition, and Chicago's Guild Complex nonfiction competition. Grand River and Joy is her first novel.

Learn more about her at her website: www.susanmesser.net. Every Wednesday morning, she posts to her blog "The Discomforts of Diversity," which you can find at http://ethnicwords.blogspot.com/

 

Customer Reviews

12 Reviews
5 star:
 (8)
4 star:
 (3)
3 star:    (0)
2 star:
 (1)
1 star:    (0)
 
 
 
 
 
Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (12 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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4 of 4 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars A grand novel, a joy to read, August 3, 2009
This review is from: Grand River and Joy (Sweetwater Fiction: Originals) (Hardcover)
This is a grand, joyful novel. Susan Messer is a superb artist, using the written word like a skilled painter or sculptor. The finely crafted, entertaining story that Susan has woven is obviously sourced from the deep well of her most heartfelt feelings. Susan has breathed such life into her protagonists that I came to view them not as acquaintances, but as dear friends. The tale irresistibly carried me to its fateful, ironic, and wistful conclusion. Perhaps most impressively, Susan gives voice to characters of the racial and economic underclass that is, frankly, at least the equal of Ralph Ellison's The Invisible Man.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Thoughts on Grand River and Joy, August 23, 2009
This review is from: Grand River and Joy (Sweetwater Fiction: Originals) (Hardcover)
After a two week reflection on Susan Messer's Grand River and Joy, the words "wisdom" and "nuance" describe my most enduring impressions. The book describes the events leading up to the Detroit race riots of the mid 1960s. Each scene is a gem in and of itself, defining a sparkling whole of texture and complexity. The narrative is crisp, vivid, funny, poignant. There is no judgment here. The reader can feel the weave of personal history and struggle for each character, each ethnic and racial group, and for the historical period as a whole. With courage, Messer characterizes both racial groups, along with differences of generation and economic standing. The reader feels for each character, could be each character. The author's wisdom and maturity shine through the narrative, as she describes ways in which individual lives, marriages, and racial struggles are a symphony of good impulses and bad, weakness and strength, hope and desperation. While defining a particular historical event, Messer's viewpoint could usefully inform a much broader set of issues. In our time, beset with a search for simple answers and with a tendency to demonize and oversimplify the other, this book shows a way. The characters also expand beyond the historical events, as they embody the messy process of personal evolution and growth in a complex world.
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3 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Tale of a city --, July 21, 2009
By 
Sharala (Detroit, MI) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Grand River and Joy (Sweetwater Fiction: Originals) (Hardcover)
A blockbuster about blockbusting. Best novel I've read in years. If you liked _Middlesex_, you'll love this one! It explores the ambiguities and disconnects in the postwar Detroit experience of white flight to the suburbs, and illustrates, through the experiences of two interacting Jewish and African-American families, what happened in the Motor City. Meticulously researched in historical detail, it sheds light on a dark subject from a human perspective. Gripping characterization, scene-setting and dialogue. I'm writing this from the perspective of a life-long Detroiter who still lives downtown, and who is sharing in the struggle of a city to reinvent itself after economic devastation. If you want to know what happened to Detroit, read this book. I did -- in twelve hours. Couldn't put it down.
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