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A Different Drummer
Audible Audiobook
– Unabridged
The stunning, thought-provoking first novel by a "lost giant of American literature" (The New Yorker)
June 1957. One hot afternoon in the backwaters of the Deep South, a young black farmer named Tucker Caliban salts his fields, shoots his horse, burns his house, and heads north with his wife and child. His departure sets off an exodus of the state’s entire black population, throwing the established order into brilliant disarray. Told from the points of view of the white residents who remained, A Different Drummer stands, decades after its first publication in 1962, as an extraordinary and prescient triumph of satire and spirit.
- Listening Length6 hours and 35 minutes
- Audible release dateAugust 27, 2019
- LanguageEnglish
- ASINB07WFQTMFV
- VersionUnabridged
- Program TypeAudiobook
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Product details
| Listening Length | 6 hours and 35 minutes |
|---|---|
| Author | William Melvin Kelley |
| Narrator | Jay Smooth |
| Whispersync for Voice | Ready |
| Audible.com Release Date | August 27, 2019 |
| Publisher | Random House Audio |
| Program Type | Audiobook |
| Version | Unabridged |
| Language | English |
| ASIN | B07WFQTMFV |
| Best Sellers Rank | #47,758 in Audible Books & Originals (See Top 100 in Audible Books & Originals) #701 in African American Literature #1,049 in Classic Literature #1,847 in Literary Fiction (Audible Books & Originals) |
Customer reviews
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the story intriguing and masterfully written. They also say the theme captures their deepest feelings about race, justice, and the human spirit. Readers describe the book as a first-rank classic of American literature.
AI-generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers find the story intriguing, well written, and compelling. They also say the book is unique and pulsating with deep.
"I can't understand how William Kelley sank into obscurity. This is a unique, important novel by someone who should be part of the pantheon of 20th..." Read more
"...Each character is very well drawn. A powerful story that captures our deepest feelings about race, justice and the human spirit." Read more
"This is a brilliant book by an extremely perceptive author...." Read more
"I have never heard of this book but it is a treasure and now I wonder how it could've been that I have never heard of it" Read more
Customers find the writing style masterful, artful, and soul-illumined.
"...Be that as it may, “Drummer” reads well today...." Read more
"Well written and compelling. Very unique and pulsating with deep feelings and emotions. Each character is very well drawn...." Read more
"This reissued work has a poetic fluid style and tells the story of an emancipation of black people living in mythical 51st southern state that was..." Read more
"The writing is beautiful, artful, soul- illumined and full of wisdom, It captures the hearts of all the characters and exposes unconscious..." Read more
Customers find the theme powerful, soul-illumined, and full of wisdom. They also say the story leaves an indelible impression and is a devastating critique of white privilege.
"...and it's a sharp, sensitive, devastating critique of white privilege (and to some extent elite organizations like the NAACP)...." Read more
"Well written and compelling. Very unique and pulsating with deep feelings and emotions. Each character is very well drawn...." Read more
"...beautiful, artful, soul- illumined and full of wisdom, It captures the hearts of all the characters and exposes unconscious racism in directly..." Read more
"...This is an example of that kind of book. It leaves an indelible Impression, and it is masterfully written." Read more
Customers find the book a first-rank classic of American literature, and praise the author as extremely perceptive.
"This is a brilliant book by an extremely perceptive author...." Read more
"...Excellent African American literature." Read more
"This nearly forgotten novel is a first-rank classic of American literature..." Read more
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Kelley had a white grandparent who played a big role his upbringing. His family, middle class achievers, had escaped the ghetto, raised Kelley in an integrated community, enabled him to attend and graduate from a private white high school where his achievements led to his matriculation at Harvard in 1957. At Harvard, where his teachers included Archibald MacLeish and John Hawkes, Kelley began his writing career. His short story, “The Poker Game”, won the prize for the best work of fiction by an undergraduate.
“A Different Drummer” (1962), last in print in 1989 in an Anchor Books edition with an erudite forward by David Bradley, barely gets noticed these days. It has not shown the staying power of works by Richard Wright, James Baldwin, Ralph Ellison or Zora Neale Hurston among others, but, as Kathryn Schulz writes in her recent “New Yorker” appreciation (January 29, 2018), “it was that rare first novel that makes future ones seem both inevitable an exciting.”
What makes “Drummer” standout, Schulz points out, is that “the story is told exclusively through the eyes” of the white townspeople in the fictional southern town in which Kelley places his story. But that perspective may have been his undoing, she points out, “[t]hat perspective was smart and important . . . but it radically diminished Kelley’s audience. Many white readers didn’t want a black writer telling them what they thought, especially when so much of it was withering. . .”
Be that as it may, “Drummer” reads well today. The insights it provides on the black disadvantage in this country are at least as valid now as they were when Kelley wrote it in the early sixties. Indeed, it is the protagonist’s reaction to his underclass status that drives the book’s action and leaves the reader asking when will blacks ever be treated equally in their own country.
End note. For more on Kelley, read the New Yorker piece by Kathryn Schulz Jan,29, 2018, the forward by David Bradloey in the 1989 Anchor Books edition of “A Different Drummer” and Kelley’s obituary in the Feb. 8, 2017, issue of the New York Times .“
A most unique example of how speculative fiction holds up a mirror to reality and allows the reader to experience “what if“.
This story continues the African American slave narrative genre by including the element of "storytelling." Kelley uses a nonlinear plot sequence folk aesthetic to portray this powerful story about the Civil Rights Movement. The setting of the story is a rural setting and the story is told from the perspective of several different whites and former slaveholders. Also adding to the power of the story is the use of nonstandard English/Southern dialect.
The major themes of this book are slavery vs. freedom and also the quest for identity. Throughout development of the plot it became clear that Tucker had a clear motivation for his rebellion. Tucker Caliban's journey from the South is about searching for his true self, his identity as an African American without the remnants of slavery associated with living in the South. The story brings in the viewpoint of several characters including his former slavemaster and a character by the name of Reverend Bradshaw who becomes mixed up with Tucker Caliban's rebellion and is used in the book as a scapegoat. Kelley's writing style and careful plot make this a very interesting read.














