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review 2021-08-10 12:12
Ein Ganove wider Willen
Harlem Shuffle - Colson Whitehead

New York in den 1950er- und 1960er-Jahren: Ray Carney wohnt mit seiner Frau Elizabeth in Harlem. Die beiden erwarten ihr zweites Kind. Obwohl Ray aus einer kriminellen Familie stammt, verdient er auf ehrliche Weise mit dem Verkauf von Möbeln seinen Lebensunterhalt. Nun jedoch reicht das Geld nicht mehr aus. Über seinen Cousin Freddie droht er, selbst ins kriminelle Milieu abzudriften...

 

„Harlem Shuffle“ ist ein Roman von Colson Whitehead.

 

Meine Meinung:
Der Roman besteht aus drei Teilen: der erste spielt im Jahr 1959, der zweite 1961 und der dritte 1964. Diese wiederum sind in jeweils acht beziehungsweise neun Kapitel untergliedert. Ein schlüssiger Aufbau.

 

Der Schreibstil ist eine der Stärken des Romans. Dem Autor gelingt es, mit gelungenen Beschreibungen die Atmosphäre Harlems jener Tage heraufzubeschwören und das Innenleben seiner Figuren anschaulich und nachvollziehbar zu machen. Zudem ist die Sprache des Romans perfekt auf die damalige Zeit und das Milieu abgestimmt.

 

Das Erzähltempo ist weniger rasant als von Whitehead sonst gewohnt, der Roman deutlich umfassender. Auf rund 380 Seiten kommt dennoch keinerlei Langeweile auf.

 

Überrascht hat mich die Vielzahl an Charakteren, denn anders als vermutet spielt nicht nur Ray eine bedeutende Rolle in der Geschichte. Anfangs fiel es mir nicht leicht, den Überblick zu behalten. Die Figuren sind detailliert ausgestaltet.

 

Inhaltlich ist der Roman erstaunlich vielschichtig und noch facettenreicher als erhofft. Zu lesen ist eine Mischung aus Kriminalgeschichte und Familiensaga, die mir gut gefallen hat.

 

Ein Pluspunkt des Romans liegt auch darin, dass viel politischer und gesellschaftlicher Hintergrund transportiert wird. Die Story vermittelt einen wichtigen Teil der Historie Harlems und ist gewissermaßen eine Hommage an das berühmte Stadtviertel. So habe ich beispielsweise von den Unruhen im Jahr 1964 dort erfahren. Darüber hinaus sensibilisiert der Roman für Diskriminierung aufgrund von Hautfarbe und sozialer Schicht. Und obwohl die Geschichte vor etlichen Jahrzehnten spielt, hatte ich das Gefühl, dass sie noch erstaunlich aktuell ist.

 

Das deutsche Cover strahlt Nostalgie aus und lädt bereits auf die Zeitreise ein. Es gefällt mir sogar besser als das der Originalausgabe. Der gleichsam prägnante wie passende Titel der amerikanischen Ausgabe wurde erfreulicherweise wörtlich übernommen.

 

Mein Fazit:
Auch mit seinem neuen Roman „Harlem Shuffle“ hat Colson Whitehead meine hohen Erwartungen nicht enttäuscht. Wieder einmal beweist der Autor seine Vielseitigkeit und hat mich begeistert. Für mich eines der besten Bücher dieses Jahres.

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review 2019-08-22 00:00
The Real Cool Killers (Harlem Cycle, #3)
The Real Cool Killers (Harlem Cycle, #3) - Chester Himes This was a bit silly, and very rough. I don’t know if it portrays life in Harlem in the 1950s realistically or not. If so, we comfortably-well-off white folks should all be ashamed.

A few years back, some of the characters in an Easy Rawlins novel I was reading argued over who was the best author (meaning African American author, I presume), and they concluded it was Chester Himes. So, of course, I had to read me some Chester Himes. I think this might be my third or fourth such endeavor.

Chester Himes wrote some cops-and-robbers-in-Harlem kinds of books in the 1950s featuring Grave Digger Jones and Coffin Ed Johnson. This is one of them. Cotton Comes to Harlem is likely the most famous of the series. I dunno, they seem a bit rough for my tastes, lots of police brutality, not always white on black, Grave Digger and Coffin Ed can mete it out as well. But, perhaps I don’t much know Harlem in the 1950s.

Anyway, we begin with a couple of black guys in a bar threatening a while guy. One starts wielding a knife at the white guy. To calm things down, so to speak, the bar tender chops off the knife wielding arm. The white guy leaves, followed by another black guy wielding a gun. A few blocks away, the white guy is shot. A crowd gathers, including a teenage gang dressed up as Arabs, long robes, long beards, shades, and so forth: "The Real Cool Moslems".

Well, Grave Digger and Coffin Ed are johnny on the spot and arrest the black guy from the bar with the gun. But then, somehow there’s an altercation and the Real Cool Moslems make off with the alleged killer, Coffin Ed shoots one of the “Moslems” and is suspended from the force. Grave Digger is left with a mess to clean up.

And quite a mess it is. First, he has to find the guy he'd arrested. That meant finding the Real Cool Moslems. Then, they discover that the gun they confiscated from the alleged killer only shot blanks, so someone else must have shot the white guy. An additional complication is that Coffin Ed's daughter appears to be involved with the Real Cool Moslems in some way. They call her Sweet Tits!

Well, eventually, Grave Digger gets it all straightened out, but not, of course, before lots of people are beat up, shot, and so forth.

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review 2019-03-11 14:36
What happens to a dream deferred?
Dapper Dan: Made in Harlem: A Memoir - Mikael Awake,Daniel R. Day

Please note that I received this book via NetGalley. This did not affect my rating or review.

 

What happens to a dream deferred?
 
      Does it dry up
      like a raisin in the sun?
      Or fester like a sore—
      And then run?
      Does it stink like rotten meat?
      Or crust and sugar over—
      like a syrupy sweet?
 
      Maybe it just sags
      like a heavy load.
 
Or does it explode?
Langston Hughes
 
Wow. So it's funny that I now know who made the clothes that the rappers that I grew up watching (Big Daddy Kane) on tv wore. I never heard of Dapper Dan before, but I found myself engrossed in his story as he recounts how his family left the south (Great Migration) and them settling into Harlem. We follow Dan as he starts playing dice and using that to make money. From there we follow him as he gets caught up in the drug world, going to jail, becoming addicted, and follows how Dan turns his life around and starts making clothes that will eventually have drug kingpins and rappers at his shop day and night in the late 80s and early 90s. 
 
Dan Day has a beauty with words. You can tell that this book was researched. Besides providing us with personal anecdotes, we also get some history while reading. I have read about the The Great Migration or the Black Migration that occurred between the early 1900s and late 1970s with African Americans moving out of the South up North and parts of the Midwest.  However, reading about how Dan's father and mother both moved up to New York and found themselves struggling there made it more real to me than just reading about it in a history book. 
 
Day shows you that for many African Americans, the decks were stacked high against them to even have enough food to put on the plates for their children. Many of the boys Day's age end up dropping out of high school and going to work selling and taking drugs. 
 
Day's fall into drugs, him seeing what it does to two of his brothers, eventually has him kicking the habit (after a stay in jail) and him embracing the tents of the Nation of Islam. He ends up not following them or the Black Panthers though due to some of the violent rhetoric they get into about drug dealers. However, he still exercises and stops eating meat. When Day travels to Africa, he eventually finds himself a tailor that makes him clothes that has all of the men in Harlem wanting to know where did he get that look. From there Day is able to start his own empire providing clothes to rappers, athletes (like Mike Tyson) and even meets a future Supreme Court Justice. 
 
When the book goes into Day's next downfall (dealing with Gucci and Fendi suing him for taking their trademark/luggage and working them into clothes) you wonder how is going to recover from this.

I thought this book was raw and honest. Day doesn't blink from the things he did and offers no apologies except when mentioning how he had multiple children and wishes he had been there more for them. Day's insights into people like Don King, Mike Tyson, and even Muhammad Ali just made the book feel like you get a front page seat watching history as it unfolds. I still don't get dice (yeah I have tried to follow that even when I was a girl) and it seems as if Day has the magic touch for dice. Him realizing that he is not going to be able to feed and clothe his family if he can't figure out another way to provide for them and his flair for designing clothes was great. 
 
I loved that the book included some pictures of Day's family growing up. Since this was an ARC there wasn't a description on the photos, but I still enjoyed seeing them. I do wish that we had gotten some pictures of the singers and rappers he mentions wearing his designs. I think that would have made the book pop even more. 
 
The Fat Boys were among the first of many rappers to make use of Dapper Dan's services.

The ending leaves things with a big question about what the future held for Day. I got nosy and found out that he ended up in a partnership with Gucci last year in a new Harlem atelier, a space for him to work his sartorial magic with a free hand and raw materials supplied by Gucci, see https://www.gq.com/story/dapper-dan-gucci-harlem-atelier-exclusive-interview

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text 2019-03-09 17:06
Reading progress update: I've read 4%.
Dapper Dan: Made in Harlem: A Memoir - Mikael Awake,Daniel R. Day

“Anyone who has ever struggled with poverty knows how extremely expensive it is to be poor.”—James Baldwin

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review 2018-11-08 06:14
Hotter
Hockey Holidays - Shannon Stacey,Stephanie Julian,Jami Davenport,Lisa B. Kamps,Kate Willoughby,Lily Harlem,Stephanie Kay,Toni Aleo,Melanie Ting,Jean Joachim,Jaymee Jacobs,Jennifer Lazaris,RJ Scott,Melody Heck Gatto,Susan Scott Shelley,Kat Mizera

This 18 book collection by some of the most amazing authors was such a treat to read!  I loved the humor, heat, and you betcha - even the hockey that was represented in each story.  I have 2 book reviews that I am sharing from this collection for you below.

 

A Second Shot by Shannon Stacey:

 

Heartwarming and truly charming, this short and sweet story has us on our toes as we read about a couple who should be together, but have been apart.  Great read of sexy and fun. 

 

A Wolfe Brothers Christmas by Jami Davenport:

 

 

Little bit of suspense mixed in with a sweet holiday story that brings a lot of sexy charm to the table.  If you loved her men in their previous stories - you are going to be glad you grabbed this little bit of heaven.  I do recommend that you read the Game On In Seattle series first, however, to avoid spoilers.  Believe me this is worth it!  

 

Each short story included gives a unique and truly hockey flavored look at romance.  What I enjoyed most was that it gave me a chance to relax and enjoy love in my favorite sport.  I give this book a 4/5 Kitty's Paws UP!

 

 

***This ARC copy was given in exchange for an honest review only.

 

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