Category: race

  • Who’s the Killer Now?
    Clemency a film by Chinonye Chukwu.  With Alfre Woodard, Aldis Hodge, Wendell Pierce, Richard Schiff.  ***** Clemency is a movie about the brutality of the death penalty.  Reviewers have seen it as a character study of the female warden (Alfre Woodard) who carries the penalty out, but it’s much more than that; it takes in the ...
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  • It Happened in Lisbon
    Like a Fading Shadow a novel by Antonio Munoz Molina.  Picador.  312 pp.  ****1/2 In 2013, Spanish novelist Antonio Munoz Molina traveled to Lisbon to help his son—who was living there as a freelancer—celebrate his 26th birthday.  That marked a return to the city for Munoz Molina; he had gone there in 1987, when his son ...
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  • What Violence Begets
    Queen and Slim a film by Melina Matsoukas.  With Daniel Kaluuya, Jodie Turner-Smith, Bokeem Woodbine.  Written by Lena Waithe  ***** This is a stupendous movie, another absolute must see, by a group of people I hadn’t encountered before (which may be a failing on my part).  The acting, directing, and cinematography are all marvelous, but the ...
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  • Closing the Book
    Home a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  145 pp. $14.95 *** God Help the Child a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  178 pp.  $14.95 *** Last April, having seen Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, I resolved to read all of her novels, in order of composition.  It’s taken a ...
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  • Women Without Men
    A Mercy a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  196 pp. $15.95 I have felt adrift in Toni Morrison novels before—at some point in every book I’ve read—but never right at the beginning as in A Mercy.  It begins with a short section in first person, and I had no idea what was going on, almost stopped ...
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  • Hear Hear!
    There There a novel by Tommy Orange.  Vintage.  292 pp. $16.00 ****1/2 This novel is as good as everyone says it is, and that’s saying a lot: it’s been hyped by everyone from Pam Houston (who was apparently Orange’s writing teacher) to President Obama, who has called it one of his favorite books.  It is a ...
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  • What Love?
    Love a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  202 pp. $15.00 I was sitting down to write about her eighth novel—I’ve been reading her work chronologically, ever since I saw Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am—when I heard the news that Toni Morrison had died, at the age of 88.  At first I thought I should write ...
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  • Whose House Is It?
    The Last Black Man in San Francisco a film by Joe Talbot.  With Jimmie Fails, Jonathan Majors, Danny Glover, Tichina Arnold. ****1/2 The Last Black Man in San Francisco was for me a study in faces, the deeply expressive faces of not only its lead actors, but also every actor in the film, from the street ...
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  • Fools’
    Paradise a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  318 pp.  $16.00 I can agree that Beloved is Toni Morrison’s masterpiece, but in some ways I found Paradise a more inventive and intricate novel.  It’s the story of a fictional town in Oklahoma that was settled in the mid-twentieth century by African Americans who had been turned away ...
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  • Frankie and Johnny Were Sweethearts
    Jazz a novel by Toni Morrison.  Plume/Penguin.  229 pp.  $11.95 As I move chronologically through Toni Morrison’s fiction and arrive at her sixth novel, I’ve come to various conclusions: I think of her as a Southern writer.  Actually, she grew up on Lorain, Ohio, and never lived in the South.  (Lorain, as she describes it in the ...
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  • Beyond Great
    Beloved  a novel by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  324 pp.  $16.00. ***** I’ve been asking myself lately what literary greatness is, and how it comes about.  Does the artist actually see and understand more than the rest of us, or does she just put it into words better?  Back in the old days we talked about writers ...
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  • Lives of Men and Women
    Tar Baby a novel by Toni Morrison.  Plume.  306 pp.  $10.95 The set-up of Tar Baby is brilliant, one of the most brilliant thing about it.  Valerian and Margaret Street live six months every year in a beautiful house on an island in the Caribbean.  She is his second wife, a trophy wife, we suspect, but ...
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  • What’s In a Name?
    Song of Solomon by Toni Morrison.  Plume.  337 pp. I wrote some weeks ago that I didn’t think Toni Morrison became a great novelist with Song of Solomon; she was great from the start.  Song of Solomon was nevertheless a definite step forward, with a larger theme, a richer backdrop, and a more complicated story than ...
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  • Lives of Girls and Women
    The Bluest Eye by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  206 pp.  $14.95. Sula by Toni Morrison.  Vintage.  174 pp.  $15.00 After seeing the marvelous documentary, Toni Morrison: The Pieces I Am at the Full Frame Documentary Film Festival, I immediately decided that, though I’d read four of her novels in the past, I wanted to sit down and read ...
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  • Better Than I Expected
    The Upside.  A film by Neil Burger.  With Kevin Hart, Bryan Cranston, Nicole Kidman, Julianna Margulies.  **** I went to this movie because I hadn’t been to the movies for a while, I was looking for something not too heavy, and I had seen the trailer any number of times, of Kevin Hart looking after a ...
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  • They Got Chemistry
    Green Book a film by Peter Farrelly.  With Viggo Mortensen, Mahershala Ali, Linda Cardellini.  ****1/2 I understand why critics like A.O. Scott might be reluctant to praise Green Book.  It’s filled with so many racial and ethnic stereotypes that it’s almost embarrassing.  The audience is often dying to laugh but not sure they should.  When you’ve ...
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  • Yes But
    Widows a film by Steve McQueen.  With Viola Davis, Michelle Rodriguez, Elizabeth Debicki, Carrie Coon, Liam Neeson.  ****1/2 Widows is a movie that is deeply satisfying emotionally and aesthetically without—as far as I’m concerned—making a hell of a lot of sense.  Veronica (Viola Davis) is the wife of a career criminal named Harry Rawlings (Liam Neeson), ...
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  • There Was a War
    Grant by Ron Chernow.  Penguin Press.  1074 pp. $40.00. ***** A friend of mine once told a story about General Patton, that after he died he asked St. Peter to take him back in history and show him the greatest general who ever lived.  St. Peter agreed, and they traveled back in time to a small ...
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  • You’ve Just Paid the Artist a Wonderful Compliment
    Now Go to Hell I wrote recently about Samuel R. Delany’s Dark Reflections, a novel in which Delany seems completely present, but has given himself another life.  Instead of being a science fiction writer, Arnold Hawley is a poet.  Instead of living in New York and teaching at Temple, he lives in New York and teaches ...
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  • Full and Starving
    Hunger: A Memoir of (My) Body by Roxane Gay.  Harper Perennial.  306 pp.  $16.99.  **** I’ll never look at a fat person the same way again. I use the word fat because that’s the word Roxane Gay uses; in fact she insists on it.  She doesn’t like the euphemisms for her situation.  She tells it like it ...
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