From Publishers Weekly
Filled with sharp humor and pitch-perfect dialogue, these seven stories explore African American experience with telegraphic urgency. In the deeply satisfying title story, which won an O. Henry Award, an insecure 12-year-old, son of an Air Force sergeant who's away in Vietnam, defeats the school bully. The young hero is black, his tormentor is white, and the story tackles institutionalized racism and the hollowness of Lyndon Johnson's "Great Society" as experienced in Waco, Tex. Even more impressive is "Roscoe in Hell," a supernatural yet scathingly realistic fantasy about a crack addict looking back on his life from the vantage point of a free-for-all party in his new abode, hell. "Soul Food" mirrors the soul of a homeless pickpocket/ex-male prostitute. In the raucous "Peacetime," set in East L.A. in 1973, a sensitive, flute-playing Marine almost loses his virginity under the tutelage of two scary dudes. The fable "Homunculus," centered on a lovesick poet, is a pool of wisdom about art as both mediator and cannibalizer of life. A master of narrative pacing, novelist McKnight ( I Get on the Bus ) evokes a quicksand world where survival is a victory.
Copyright 1991 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
From Library Journal
Here are seven tales of fable, fantasy, futurism, and black American experience. The title story, which has won both the Kenyon Review New Fiction Prize and O. Henry Award, tells of a military brat who encounters the bully of prejudice in himself. In the final story, a disintegrating United States turns to cannibalism, while rape, drugs, and violence are themes of other stories. Thus, a visiting grandmother listens to each floor creak differently and recognizes the tradition of violence that has been handed down in her family. The writing is sometimes convoluted but effectively captures spoken voices, from drug dealers to five-year-olds. The author's previous works include another collection, Moustapha's Eclipse (Univ. of Pittsburgh Pr., 1988), and the novel I Get on the Bus ( LJ 5/1/90). For collections of literary fiction.
- Nancy Shires, East Carolina Univ., Greenville, N.C.Copyright 1992 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to an out of print or unavailable edition of this title.
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