Mr. Loverman
"In this vibrant novel, Evaristo draws wonderful character portraits of complex individuals as well as the West Indian immigrant culture in Britain."--Booklist"Barrington Jedediah Walker lives in London, but he also lives a lie . . . As his marriage self-destructs, Barrington sees an opportunity...
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"In this vibrant novel, Evaristo draws wonderful character portraits of complex individuals as well as the West Indian immigrant culture in Britain."--Booklist"Barrington Jedediah Walker lives in London, but he also lives a lie . . . As his marriage self-destructs, Barrington sees an opportunity to be with the man he loves, but after such protracted misery in this comic, touching book, happiness seems distant and frightening."--Village Voice, included in "65 Things to Do in New York City During Spring 2014"Bernardine Evaristo uncovers characters lost to history and myth and with compassion, an original and brilliant voice, and an unparalleled craft--all tinged with humor--she restores them and thus us.”--Chris Abani, author of The Secret History of Las Vegas"Evaristo is extremely attentive to the function of language, the power of words to shape reality."--Ron Charles, Washington Post Book WorldThis riproaring, full-bodied riff on sex, secrecy and family is Bernardine Evaristo’s seventh book. If you don’t yet know her work, you should--she says things about modern Britain that no one else does.”--Guardian (UK)A brilliant study of great characters in modern London. As such--as Mr. Barrington Walker, Esq. himself might have acknowledged--it is very clever indeed.”--Independent on Sunday (UK)Fear and loathing of homosexuals has a long history in the West Indies...Bernardine Evaristo, in her funny, brave new novel, Mr. Loverman...explores issues of homosexuality in the British West Indies and London’s West Indian diaspora community...I loved...this tender, even trailblazing novel.”--The Spectator (UK)Evaristo’s second prose novel similarly transforms our often narrow perceptions of gay men in England. The familiar trope of the closet is deployed, but contested and reworked in winningly credible, moving ways...The effect is variously comical, agonizing and, ultimately, moving. Evaristo tells us of lives we imagined we knew, while rearranging much more than the furniture.”--Independent (UK)Evaristo has a lot going on in this unusual urban romance, but beneath her careful study of race and sexuality is a beautiful love story. Not many writers could have two old men having sexual intercourse in a bedsit to a soundtrack of Shabba Ranks’s Mr. Loverman’ and save it from bad taste, much less make it sublime. But the hero of this book, and his canny creator, make everything taste just fine.”--Telegraph (UK)"A pacey fable about summoning both the daring and the art to live a truthful life, and her writing simply fizzes with musical energy."--Sunday Express (UK)This poignant tragi-comedy goes some way toward exploring engrained prejudice.”--Time Out London (UK)Barrington Jedidiah Walker is seventy-four and leads a double life. Born and bred in Antigua, he's lived in Hackney, London, for years. A flamboyant character with a fondness for William Shakespeare, Barrington is a husband, father, grandfatherand also secretly gay. With an abundance of laugh-out-loud humor and wit, Mr. Loverman explodes cultural myths and shows the extent of what can happen when people fear the consequences of being true to themselves.His deeply religious and disappointed wife, Carmel, thinks he sleeps with other women. When their marriage goes into meltdown, Barrington wants to divorce Carmel and live with Morris, but after a lifetime of fear and deception, will he manage to break away? With an abundance of laugh-out-loud humor and wit, Mr. Loverman explodes cultural myths and shows the extent of what can happen when people fear the consequences of being true to themselves.
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