Synopsis Baldwin writes an affecting, affirming, bluesy love story about a pair of teenage lovers--one in jail, one pregnant--and their attempts to stay together and raise a family in the face of racist oppression. Fonny, the artist, is arrested for a crime he didn't commit and incarcerated in the Tombs. His devoted girlfriend, Tish, is determined to get him out.
| Details | | Publication Date: | 2006-10-10 | | Series: | Vintage International Series | | Edition Description: | Reprint |
| Size | | Length: | 197 pages | | Height: | 8.0 in | | Width: | 5.3 in | | Thickness: | 0.5 in | | Weight: | 8.0 oz |
Publisher's Note When a pregnant Tish's boyfriend Fonny, a sculptor, is wrongfully jailed for the rape of a Puerto Rican woman, their families unite to prove the charge false. Reprint. 10,000 first printing.
Industry Reviews "[This novel] is economically, almost poetically constructed, and may certainly be read as a kind of allegory, which refuses conventional outbursts of violence, preferring to stress the provisional, tentative nature of our lives....Tish's voice comes to seem absolutely natural and we learn to know her from the inside out. Even her flights of poetic fancy...are convincing. Also convincing is Baldwin's insistence upon the primacy of emotions like love, hate, or terror: it is not sentimentality, but basic psychology....[This] is a moving, painful story. It is so vividly human and so obviously based upon reality, that it strikes us as timeless--an art that has not the slightest need of esthetic tricks, and even less need of fashionable apocalyptic excesses." New York Times Book Review - Joyce Carol Oates (05/19/1974)
"A moving, painful story, so vividly human and so obviously based on reality that it strikes us as timeless." Joyce Carol Oates
"To be James Baldwin is to touch on so many hidden places in Europe, in America, the Negro, the white man--to be forced to understand so much." Alfred Kazin
"Baldwin...tries to show the impact that getting caught up in the US justice system has on ordinary people. In his scheme it simply makes them heroic. No other novelist since Balzac has hated the cops so much, but Baldwin wants to celebrate a black family's survival, to praise the bonds between sisters, between parents and child." New York Review of Books - Darryl Pinckney (04/13/2000)
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