**Rediscover the sensational 1967 literary thriller that captures the bitter struggles of postwar Black intellectuals and artists With a foreword by Ishmael Reed and a new introduction by Merve Emre about how this explosive novel laid bare America's racial fault lines** Max Reddick, a novelist,
The Man Who Cried I Am
β Scribed by Williams, John A
- Book ID
- 110487201
- Publisher
- The Overlook Press
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 656 KB
- Category
- Fiction
- ISBN-13
- 9781504033558
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
A black expatriate writer uncovers a sinister plot to destroy the American civil rights movement in this incendiary masterpiece from one of the twentieth-century's most provocative and acclaimed novelists
On a warm spring afternoon in 1964, Max Reddick sits at an outdoor cafΓ© in Amsterdam, nursing a glass of Pernod. Along with the large doses of Librium and morphine running through his veins, the alcohol allows him to forget the circumstances that have brought him here and the painful disease ravaging his bodyβalmost, in fact, to forget who and what he is.
From the streets and corporate offices of New York to the jazz clubs of Paris and Amsterdam, from the battlefields of World War II to utopian missions in Africa, to the Oval Office itself, Max's journey as a black author and journalist has brought him repeatedly into the nexus of hypocrisy and duplicity surrounding race relations and civil rights. But nothing he has encountered could...
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
Generally recognized as one of the most important novels of the tumultuous 1960s, _The Man Who Cried I Am_ vividly evokes the harsh era of segregation that presaged the expatriation of African American intellectuals. Through the eyes of journalist Max Reddick, and with penetrating fictional portrait
Generally recognized as one of the most important novels of the tumultuous 1960s, *The Man Who Cried I Am* vividly evokes the harsh era of segregation that presaged the expatriation of African American intellectuals. Through the eyes of journalist Max Reddick, and with penetrating fictional portrait
Generally recognized as one of the most important novels of the tumultuous 1960s, *The Man Who Cried I Am* vividly evokes the harsh era of segregation that presaged the expatriation of African American intellectuals. Through the eyes of journalist Max Reddick, and with penetrating fictional portrait