The espionage genre remains one of the whitest, least diverse
branches of suspense fiction. That’s ironic, because so many great
African American narratives have been about “passing,” and living
watchfully undercover. This book is
extraordinary in a lot of ways — first because it places a
female African American intelligence officer, Marie Mitchell, at the
center of a Cold War tale of political espionage. But also striking is
the novel’s deeper recognition that, to some extent, rudimentary secrecy is something all of her African American characters have
learned as an everyday survival skill. As Marie’s father wryly tells her
on the day of her graduation from the FBI training academy at Quantico,
“I’ve been a spy in this country for as long as I can remember.”
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Thursday, October 31, 2019
American Spy by Lauren Wilkinson
This is a black spy novel and it is great. Just read it.
The book jumps around in time and place, from the early 1960s to the early
1990s; from Queens to Martinique to Burkina Faso. At the heart of the
story is Marie’s professional romantic encounter, while
working as a contractor for the CIA, with the actual historical figure
Thomas Sankara, the revolutionary young president of Burkina Faso who is
known as “Africa’s Che Guevara.” While Marie’s assignment in Burkina Faso is filled with seduction and double and triple crosses, the most absorbing parts of her
story is when she flashes back to her middle-class
childhood in Queens and to her time in the 1980s as a special agent. There is a lot to grok here, and it is so well written that you are propelled through the book to the end. This is Wilkinson's first novel, and I am already looking forward to her next.
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