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Such Sweet Thunder: A Novel [Hardcover]

Vincent O. Carter (Author), Herbert R. Lottman (Foreword)
5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)


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Book Description

March 10, 2003
“For those of us who are used to handling manuscripts — sometimes to examine them line by line, more often to flip through the pages — it’s a privileged moment indeed when we realize that we are dealing with a text destined for that small shelf of memorable literature certain to be printed and reprinted over the years. The telltale signs, for me, are trembling hands, eyeglasses clouding over — the psychological equivalent of a thunderclap. The book you have in hand now provided all of these emotions. ”-- From The Foreword By Herbert R. Lottman

SUCH SWEET THUNDER opens in 1944, somewhere in France, near the fighting. Amerigo Jones, a young foot soldier, is invited by a buddy to bed down with a French girl who has put herself at the service of a black United States infantry unit. But when Amerigo half-reluctantly goes to her he sees not a hardened prostitute, but a sad and bewildered innocent. In a daze, he watches her features take on the aspect of Cosima Thornton, the great obsession of his youth in his native Kansas City. This moment of connection serves as the springboard for a unique and compelling novel that deserves a place of prominence in American literature. Amerigo drifts back in time, so far back he recalls suckling at his mother’s breast. We see life through the eyes of the boy at each stage of his development as he struggles for independence, respect, understanding from his friends and elders, and above all, love.
Set during the segregated 1920s and ’30s, Such Sweet Thunder is laced throughout with references to the struggle for justice and freedom, with many allusions to the white man and the white man’s strange, brutal, and just plain crazy ways. But Amerigo also learns about sexuality, love, art, literature, and life itself — the standard themes of the European bildungsroman. Amerigo is a dreamer, and yet it is clear that many of his dreams will go unfulfilled, not because of who he is but because of the color of his skin.
Such Sweet Thunder is a jazz song of a book, a river of sound, something like an epic poem. Carter dedicates the novel to Duke Ellington, and it is replete with references to the influential musicians of the Kansas City jazz scene of his youth — Count Basie, Jay McShann, Big Joe Turner, and the young Charlie Parker. And there are references to Louis Armstrong, whose scat singing is a lot like the extended dialogue riffs between the book’s characters. Jazz musicians in Kansas City during the Depression created an influential big band sound, and in a way Carter has structured his book similarly. It has an orchestral feel — it’s big; it’s got sweep; the characters are like musical instruments, carrying their own themes; there are solos, set pieces, drama, comedy, and pathos — and all are arranged to transport the reader on an evocative and emotional journey.
Carter has written an unprecedented literary portrait of African American life, but at the heart of this grandly told story is a boy, Amerigo Jones, full of life and humor and as desirous and deserving of love as any child. Part of the greatness of Carter’s achievement is his ability to write the way a young boy truly experiences the world. And his depiction of the noisy, jostling, mysterious, fascinating world rich with warmth and fun, danger, and uncertainty in which Amerigo must find his way is as overwhelming and unforgettable as any to be found in literature.

Editorial Reviews

From Publishers Weekly

Written in 1963 and shelved, this hefty, astonishing novel by a black American expatriate who died in 1983 tells-in electric modernist vernacular prose-the story of a black child's life in Jim Crow America. In France during WWII, soldier Amerigo Jones thinks back on his youth in the 1920s and '30s in a black community resembling the author's native Kansas City. At first, the members of his extended family are presented as a chorus of voices fading in and out: his lovely, luxury-craving mother, Viola; his stern, dapper bellhop father, Rutherford; his grandmother and a bevy of aunts. After this short stream-of-consciousness section, the novel settles into a fluent, easy chronological narrative weighted toward the dreamy, determined Amerigo's early childhood, but stretching all the way to his graduation from high school. Through a steady accumulation of detail ("Five o'clock. Supper: hot dog sandwiches, salad, and beer for them and strawberry soda-pop for him"), sustained lyricism ("Fat round A's, B's, and C's spread out over the ruled spaces of his mind"), flights of fancy ("And he was the Swan Prince! `Wauk! Wauk!' He cried plaintively, his heart beating violently") and, especially, reams of swinging dialogue (" `A man reads this paper an' gits fightin' mad! Waitaminute!' "), Carter paints an uncommonly rich picture of black American family life in the early 20th century. Like the composition it is named for, a Duke Ellington and Billy Strayhorn tribute to Shakespeare, it is a marvelous blend of jazz rhythms and high literary tradition.
Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information, Inc.

From Booklist

Amerigo Jones is a young foot soldier in World War II, fighting in France, when a friend offers him a French girl who is sleeping with black soldiers. The occasion prompts the dreamy young man to drift back into his childhood and memories of Cosima, the love of his youth. The reader is treated to vivid recollections of life in the alley dwellings of pre-World War II Kansas City. For Amerigo and his parents, it is a life of poverty constricted even further by racial discrimination. But it is also a life of joy and the slow, steady rhythms of family, neighborhood, and church. Amerigo remembers the exhilaration of running with some bad kids, breaking out of the confines of the backyard, and the ecstasy in church of voices blending into "One Great Voice." The newspapers and neighborhood are full of news of Satchel Paige and the NAACP's efforts to end lynching, as young Amerigo dreams beyond the boundaries of racism. Carter, author of The Bern Book (1973), a memoir of his life of self-imposed exile, wrote this novel in 1963. The book wasn't published because it didn't fit the mold of black literature in the 1960s. Readers will appreciate its dreamy, nostalgic quality and lyrical writing, which evokes urban life before the war and offers a stirring portrait of a young boy growing up. Vanessa Bush
Copyright © American Library Association. All rights reserved

Product Details

  • Hardcover: 560 pages
  • Publisher: Steerforth; 1 edition (March 10, 2003)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1586420585
  • ISBN-13: 978-1586420581
  • Product Dimensions: 6.4 x 1.7 x 9.2 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 2.2 pounds
  • Average Customer Review: 5.0 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (1 customer review)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #2,696,003 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

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5 of 7 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Captivating Coming of Age Story, April 16, 2003
By 
The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers (RAWSISTAZ.com and BlackBookReviews.net) - See all my reviews
This review is from: Such Sweet Thunder: A Novel (Hardcover)
SUCH SWEET THUNDER is a posthumously released novel written in 1963 by Vincent O Carter. Several publishers rejected Carters orginal manuscript and Carter died before he could see his work published. However, the manuscript was found 30 years later by Herbert Lottman in the possession of Carters girlfriend. Lottman writes the foreword for the reborn manuscript and the only changes he made to the novel was the name from its original title  The Primary Colors.

SUCH SWEET THUNDER begins in 1944 when the reader meets Amerigo Jones who is a solider fighting in World War II. He is visiting a French prostitute and in her eyes, Amerigo envisions a woman from his youth. The story from this point is lyrical flashback to a segregated Kansas City of the 1920 and 30. The reader sees life from Amerigos perspective as he deals with independence, love, sexuality and respect. Amerigo is a dreamer who realizes many of dreams will be unfulfilled because of his skin color.

SUCH SWEET THUNDER is a captivating coming of age story. It is well written and the novel enthralls the reader with the vivid descriptions of a young mans life. I am glad that Mr. Lottoman found the manuscript and completed the process that Carter started 40 years earlier.

Reviewed by Robilyn Heath
of The RAWSISTAZ Reviewers

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
On a cold winter morning shortly before dawn in the year 1944, the stars shone brightly, but were now and again obscured by drifts of heavy clouds. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
toe over heel, little niggah, thy bucket, heel over toe, vanity dresser, middle room door, them jokers, redeeming light, little joker, such sweet thunder, big white bed, flowered pattern, momma tell, skinny little boy, chimney hole
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Aunt Rose, Aunt Lily, Mary Ann, Miss Allie Mae, Miss Chapman, Miss Sadie, Willie Joe, Bra Mo, Miss Ada, Old Jake, Aunt Nadine, Aunt Tish, Amerigo Jones, Eighteenth Street, Miss Lucille, Santa Claus, Aunt Nancy, Miss Moore, Campbell Street, Rutherford Jones, Miss Jennings, Gloomy Gus, Miss Myrt, Sister James, Admiral Boulevard
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