The National Book Award winner, one of the New York Times Best Five books of fiction in 2017, and most compellingly, read by Obama. This is a compactly powerful read that will transport you to places you may not want to see, but you will not regret it. The book will read easily and quickly, but it will stick with you.
This book demonstrates the slow apocalypse being experienced by poor African Americans. It is the story of a broken family living on the
Gulf Coast of Mississippi. Leonie is an uneducated black woman, high school drop out, a mother at
17, hooked on drugs, married to a white man named Michael whose cousin
killed her brother and who is himself completing a jail sentence. Their
son Jojo acts as a bridge between grandparents Pop and Mama (the only real parents in the story) and his toddler
sister Kayla.
Hearing that Michael is about to be released from prison, Leonie, her
children and her equally substance-addicted white friend Misty embark
on a long trip north to meet him. It’s a road journey without epic or
transcendent qualities: an often amusingly banal odyssey full of gas
station ennui, dodgy drug deals, kids who teeter between nausea and
ravenous hunger. On the return leg, when a police officer stops their
car – with its motley crew of ex-cons and crystal meth fans – it seems
probable that one of them will be gunned down, but somehow they don't. There are no overt acts of injustice here, just the ravages of centuries of prejudice and a tilted playing field coming to continued fruition.
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