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American Histories

Stories

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
"A powerful assemblage of short stories exploring late-in-life angst through personal myth, cultural memory, and riffs on an empire scorched by its own hubris" (O, The Oprah Magazine) from award-winning author John Edgar Wideman—his first collection in more than a decade.
"Race and its reverberations are at the core of this slim, powerful volume, a blend of fiction, memoir, and reimagined history, in which the boundaries between those forms are murky and ever shifting" (The Boston Globe). In this singular collection, John Edgar Wideman blends the personal, historical, and political to invent complex, charged stories about love, death, struggle, and what we owe each other. With characters ranging from everyday Americans to Jean-Michel Basquiat to Nat Turner, American Histories is a journey through time, experience, and the soul of our country.

In "JB & FD," Wideman reimagines conversations between John Brown, the antislavery crusader, and Frederick Douglass, the abolitionist and orator—conversations that produce a fantastical, rich correspondence that spans years and ideologies. "Maps and Ledgers" eavesdrops on a brother and sister today as they ponder their father's killing of another man. "Williamsburg Bridge" sits inside a man sitting on a bridge who contemplates his life before he decides to jump. "My Dead" is a story about how the already-departed demand more time, more space in the lives of those who survive them.

American Histories is "an important addition to Wideman's body of writing and a remarkable demonstration of his ability to address social issues through a range of fictional forms and styles" (Pittsburgh Post-Gazette). An extended meditation on family, history, and loss, American Histories weaves together historical fact, philosophical wisdom, and deeply personal vignettes. This is Wideman at his best—emotionally precise and intellectually stimulating—an extraordinary collection by a master.
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    • Library Journal

      October 15, 2017

      MacArthur Fellow, two-time PEN/Faulkner Award winner, and two-time National Book Award and National Book Critics Circle Award finalist Wideman is a literary force not to be ignored. Here he offers new stories that sometimes introduce real-life characters as they walk the line between personal and historical. For instance, one story envisions a conversation between John Brown and Frederick Douglass, while in other stories the narrator contemplates his relationship with his father and with his late brother and uncle.

      Copyright 2017 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Publisher's Weekly

      Starred review from January 29, 2018
      Wideman, a finalist for the National Book Award for Fatheralong, boldly subverts notions of what a short story can be in this wonderful collection. In “Williamsburg Bridge” a man plans his suicide from the bridge while considering the lives and deaths of others below him, as well as what has brought him to this point. “Writing Teacher” explores the obligations and feelings of a black professor toward his white fiction writing student after she submits a story about the plights of a young black woman. “JB & FD” imagines a conversation over many years between John Brown and Frederick Douglass; “Nat Turner Confesses” brings the young Nat to life as a boy determined to change his fate. In “Yellow Sea,” a man watches the films Precious and The Yellow Sea and analyzes the characters and their brutal struggles on screen and brings them into his own world, offering advice and empathy. Each story feels new, challenging, and exhilarating, beguilingly combining American history with personal history.

    • Kirkus

      February 1, 2018
      In 1993, Wideman published a book called All Stories Are True, and this new collection represents both an affirmation of and a challenge to that claim.The book's provocations begin with "A Prefatory Note" addressed to an unnamed president of the United States, asking when, or if, slavery will ever end, even with the 13th Amendment to the U.S. Constitution. ("Slavery as a social condition," the letter states, "did not disappear....Skin color continues to separate some of us into a category as unforgiving as the label property stamped on a person." The next story, "JB & FD," reimagines, often to startlingly persuasive effect, the real-life transactions between the 19th-century black author/activist Frederick Douglass and the militant white abolitionist John Brown, whose bloody scourge against slavery climaxed with the deadly 1859 raid on Harpers Ferry. The voices of the two men, in correspondence and conversation, seem to blend in with each other even as they argue over tactics and ideology. Later in the book, Wideman (Writing to Save a Life, 2016, etc.) makes a bolder, riskier move by taking his own crack at the ill-fated insurgent slave Nat Turner's confessions. In between, there are stories, or "stories," such as "Maps and Ledgers," in which the narrator recalls how his father's murderous act upended his family's perilous sense of harmony; "My Dead," Wideman's grim, haunting tally of "a bad ten months" during which he lost "a brother [and] a niece," who joined other dead relatives from whom they received names and legacies; and "Williamsburg Bridge," a digressive, quasi-surreal tour de force peering into the crowded mind of a man who's both hesitant about and intent on diving into the East River. You can also find tips on storytelling ("Writing Teacher") and even a review of the 2010 South Korean movie thriller The Yellow Sea that morphs into a meditation on the 2009 film Precious. You might, in other words, find this collection to be all over the place, and yet all of these pieces are linked by astringent wit, audacious invention, and a dry sensibility whose owner has for decades wrestled with what he describes as "the puzzle of how and why and where and who we come from."Wideman's recent work strides into the gap between fiction and nonfiction as a means of disclosing hard, painful, and necessary truths.

      COPYRIGHT(2018) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from February 1, 2018
      In his 50-year literary career, Wideman (Writing to Save a Life, 2016) has tackled race, family, and art from nearly every imaginable angle. As in much of his previous work, his latest collection blurs the line between fact and fiction, form and function, and history and autobiography. Some stories test the relationship between a storyteller and his characters, while in others historical figures narrate. In JB & FD, a writer painstakingly imagines the interactions between abolitionists John Brown and Frederick Douglass. In Nat Turner Confesses, an African American privileged with grad school training dives into the mind of the eponymous rebel-slave. Maps and Ledgers looks at complicated family histories. When a father, on his first day in a new teaching position, kills an old friend, Aunt C rescues him, and that's when the family's troubles really begin. Williamsburg Bridge is a darkly comic look at death and inspiration as a suicidal man sitting on the bridge attempts to explain what led him there. The book fittingly closes with Collage, a paean to artists Romare Bearden and Jean-Michel Basquiat, whose styles Wideman emulates to explore intuition and composition. Wideman's shape-shifting, lyrical narratives offer mesmerizing and challenging perspectives on the creative process and the black experience, decisively affirming his stature as a major voice in American literature.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2018, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      January 1, 2018

      Throughout his decorated literary career, Wideman (Sent for You Yesterday; Philadelphia Fire) has compiled an extended meditation on how we are able to heal by transmuting personal and historical facts into constant reimagining. This sprawling collection of short stories is an unapologetic resurrection of those facts in today's political climate, with Wideman's introduction addressed directly to the president of the United States. The author returns to the streets of Pittsburgh and his childhood memories, envisions a conversation between John Brown and Frederick Douglass, and probes the popular culture we use to escape, forget, and grieve. Each story is a parallel universe just out of reach, with the whole assembled like shards of broken glass. Interspersing pieces that include microfictions like "Bunny and Glide" and prose poems like "Snow," Wideman elucidates loneliness and helplessness with lyrical economy and rhythmic sadness. VERDICT A deeply personal collection of stories illuminating the thinning and cyclical threads of history that both sustain us and tear us apart. Highly recommended. [See Prepub Alert, 9/25/17.]--Joshua Finnell, Colgate Univ., Hamilton, NYDeep dives into essential truths, tough but hopeful outcomes, and gritty mountain justice

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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