An American Marriage (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel
An American Marriage (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel book cover

An American Marriage (Oprah's Book Club): A Novel

Paperback – February 5, 2019

Price
$9.49
Format
Paperback
Pages
336
Publisher
Algonquin Books
Publication Date
ISBN-13
978-1616208684
Dimensions
5.75 x 0.75 x 8.25 inches
Weight
9.6 ounces

Description

Winner of the Women's Prize for Fiction Winner of the 2019 Aspen Words Literary Prize Shortlisted for the 2020 International DUBLIN Literary Award “One of my favorite parts of summer is deciding what to read when things slow down just a bit, whether it’s on a vacation with family or just a quiet afternoon . . . An American Marriage by Tayari Jones is a moving portrayal of the effects of a wrongful conviction on a young African-American couple.” —Barack Obama “Tayari Jones’s wise and compassionate new novel, An American Marriage . . . is a clear vision of the quiet devastation of a family. It is beautifully written, with many allusions to black music and culture — including the everyday poetry of the African-American community that begs to be heard.” — The New York Times Book Review “Powerful . . . The story . . . is both sweeping and intimate—at once an unsparing exploration of what it means to be black in America and a remarkably lifelike portrait of a marriage.” — The New Yorker “Compelling . . . spun with tender patience by Jones, who cradles each of these characters in a story that pulls our sympathies in different directions. She never ignores their flaws, their perfectly human tendency toward self-justification, but she also captures their longing to be kind, to be just, to somehow behave well despite the contradictory desires of the heart.” —Ron Charles, Washington Post “Tayari Jones is a bard of the modern South, a writer whose skill at weaving stories is matched only by her compassion for her characters. While An American Marriage confronts thorny issues around race and the criminal justice system it is, at heart, a love story. It’s also a meditation on the creation of art, the meaning of family and the conflict between duty and desire. Jones has crafted a complex, layered story that’s both intimate and broad, a literary page-turner that’s impossible to put down.” — The Los Angeles Times “This moment, right here in February 2018, feels like exactly the right time for Tayari Jones to be writing — and for us to be reading Tayari Jones. In the years since her debut, she has been getting better, and . . . added heft and substance to the rich and necessary stories she weaves.” —BuzzFeed “Brilliant, timely . . . heartbreaking . . . With spare and shimmering prose that can strike with the shock of a shiv, Jones captures the life-altering losses Roy and Celestial endure in this unforgettable American marriage.” — USA Today “A tense and timely love story. Told in letters and from alternating perspectives, packed with brave questions about race and class, An American Marriage is the perfect book-club book—one the whole group will finish and discuss with conviction.” — People (Book of the Week) “A stunning polyphonic novel . . . An American Marriage explores the effects of outside forces beyond its characters’ control – racism and mass incarceration – alongside the more personal questions like whether or not to have children, how to interact with in-laws, how to reconcile differences in background and upbringing, and finally, how to negotiate a marriage when love, on its own, is no longer enough.” — Bust “ An American Marriage is that rare treasure, a novel that pulls you under like a fever dream, a novel whose pages you start to ration midway through, a novel you miss like a lover the minute you kiss its final page goodbye. An American Marriage is a gripping, masterfully crafted message in a bottle, at once a dispatch from the past and a foreshadowing of the future, bringing exquisite reading pleasure and painful, crucial news.” — San Francisco Chronicle “A fascinating, beautifully written story about love, the U.S. prison system, and family.” — Houston Chronicle "Novelist Jones writes brilliantly about expectations and loss and racial injustice, and how love must evolve when our best laid plans go awry." —Esquire.com "Tayari Jones provides an essential contemporary portrait of a marriage in this searing novel. An American Marriage gorgeously evokes the New South as it explores mass incarceration on a personal level." — Entertainment Weekly “Jones, who gains in skill with each book, has made Atlanta her fictional turf, and conjuring a skein of complex relationships her trademark. She writes in folksy, assured sentences; the reading is almost effortless . . . An American Marriage swings the reader’s sympathies widely, centrifugally, as if on a merry-go-round. The men are believable. The women are recognizable, familiar as a favorite sweater. The details are pleasurable, down to the Huey Newton chairs on Roy’s parents’ front porch.” — Newsday “Quietly powerful . . . [Jones’s] writing illuminates the bits and pieces of a marriage: those almost imperceptible moments that make it, break it, and forcefully tear it apart.” — The Atlantic " Powerful . . . Astonishing . . . Through the accumulation of small details, Jones paints a portrait of a nation still deeply divided along lines of race and class." —J. Courtney Sullivan, The Boston Globe “This beautiful, sad novel is about so many big things — love, friendship, loyalty, betrayal, heartbreak, healing, family, racism, endurance and transcendence. But all of that is secondary to the story at its core . . . This is a complex novel that goes well beyond the plot elements of infidelity and racism to explore the intricacies of family and romantic relationships in modern America.” — Minneapolis Star-Tribune “This utterly gripping novel from Tayari Jones explores marriage in an intimate and realistic way, making it an engaging read for both married and single audiences alike.This stirring love story is a profoundly insightful look into the hearts and minds of three people who are at once bound and separated by forces beyond their control.” — Paste Magazine “Tayari Jones has emerged as one of the most important voices of her generation.” — Essence “In this unforgettable novel, Tayari Jones tackles hard questions about pride, betrayal, and our capacity to forgive.” — Real Simple “This is a novel that unabashedly plays with your senses of right and not-quite-right. It also plays with your emotions, if you’ve ever been in love — so have a handful of tissues nearby. An American Marriage could bring you to your knees.” — The Philadelphia Tribune “Tayari Jones’ An American Marriage is at its beating heart a love triangle between three 30-something black professionals in contemporary Atlanta. Calling it a triangle, however, diminishes its complexity and nuance; this is a book whose characters will whisper in your head long after you’ve put it down.” — The Seattle Times “This novel is peopled by vividly realized, individual characters and driven by interpersonal drama, but it is also very much about being black in contemporary America. This is, at its heart, a love story, but a love story warped by racial injustice. And, in it, Jones suggests that racial injustice haunts the African-American story. Subtle, well-crafted, and powerful.” — Kirkus Reviews (starred review) “Layered like Pearl Cleage’s What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day , this title will appeal to all readers of contemporary fiction.” — Library Journal (starred review) "An American Marriage is a masterpiece of storytelling, an intimate look deep into the souls of people who must reckon with the past while moving forward—with hope and pain—into the future." — The Rumpus “The great Tayari Jones published her masterly opus An American Marriage , and it is everything you want to read in a novel right now.” —TheRoot.com “Suspenseful and compelling. An American Marriage delivers on all fronts,xa0raising questions both intimate and epic about the intersections of race and class, the burdens and joys of shared history, andxa0what it means to commit to a future together.” — Salon.com “ Nuanced and evocativ e . . . An American Marriage is a compelling exploration of the thorny conflicts that drive us apart and bind us, the distorting weight of racism, and how commitment looks across time – and generations.” — BBC.com " Breathtaking . . . Jones is a master with words and An American Marriage is the wordsmith at the top of her game." — Bitch Media " Heart-wrenching . . . An American Marriage poses profound questions about what we owe each other, and what injustices we allow to persist." — Huffington Post "One of America's finest writers, Tayari Jones has offered up another masterpiece with her latest novel, a tremendously powerful story about love, injustice, inequality, and strength. An American Marriage reveals how quickly dreams can be derailed due to systemic malignant forces all around us. It's a novel of vision and grace, and it will bury itself in your consciousness." — Nylon.com “Tayari Jones is a wonderful storyteller. Anyone who has read Jones’s earlier works ( Leaving Atlanta , The Untelling , Silver Sparrow ) is familiar with her strong authorial voice and her careful construction of each sentence, paragraph, and chapter. Her attention to craft is paramount. An American Marriage is an engrossing novel about many things, but at its heart, it’s a love story, a uniquely American love story.” — Ploughshares "It’s always an event when there’s new writing from Tayari Jones . . . " — Electric LIterature “Jones crafts an affecting tale that explores marriage, family, regret, and other feelings made all the more resonant by her well-drawn characters and their intricate conflicts of heart and mind.” — Booklist “Jones ( Silver Sparrow ) lays bare the devastating effects of wrongful imprisonment in this piercing tale of an unspooling marriage . . . Masterfully executed . . . Jones uses her love triangle to explore simmering class tensions and reverberating racial injustice in the contemporary South, while also delivering a satisfying romantic drama.” xad– Publishers Weekly “Tayari Jones displays tremendous writing prowess with An American Marriage , an enchanting novel that succeeds at every level. From the very start, An American Marriage pulls the reader in with gorgeous prose. Even beyond its plot, the story soars. It doesn’t just focus on one instance of a marriage; it explores philosophical and political quandaries, including generational expectations of men and women, the place of marriage in modern society, systemic racism, toxic masculinity, and more. It does so in a gentle, subtle way, avoiding didacticism as it nudges the reader to question their own conventions and ideals. There are rarely novels as timely or fitting as An American Marriage . It brings abstract ideas about race and love down to the material level. The story is gripping, and the characters are unforgettable.” — Foreword Reviews (starred review) “I love An American Marriage and I’m so excited for this book to be in the world. Tayari’s novel is timely, thoughtful, and beautifully written. Reading it, I found myself angry as hell, laughing out loud, choking up and cheering. A gem of a book.” —Jacqueline Woodson, author of Another Brooklyn and Brown Girl Dreaming “Tayari Jones is blessed with vision to see through to the surprising and devastating truths at the heart of ordinary lives, strength to wrest those truths free, and a gift of language to lay it all out, compelling and clear. That has been true from her very first book, but with An American Marriage that vision, that strength, and that truth-telling voice have found a new level of artistry and power.” — Michael Chabon, author of Moonglow “Tayari Jones is a great storyteller. An American Marriage holds the reader from first page to last, with her compassionate observation, her clear-eyed insight and her beautifully written and complex characters. Jones understands love and loss and writes with passion and precision about the forces that move us all from one to another.”xa0 — Amy Bloom, author of Lucky Us “ An American Marriage asks hard questions about injustice and betrayal, and answers them with a heartbreaking and genuinely suspenseful love story in which nobody's wrong and everybody's wounded. Tayari Jones has written a complex and important novel about people trapped in a tragic situation, struggling to reconcile their responsibilities and desires.” — Tom Perrotta, author of Mrs. Fletcher “Tayari Jones’ An American Marriage is a stunning epic love story filled with breathtaking twists and turns, while bursting with realized and unrealized dreams. Skillfully crafted and beautifully written, An American Marriage is an exquisite, timely, and powerful novel that feels both urgent and indispensable.” —Edwidge Danticat, author of Breath, Eyes, Memory “Tayari Jones weaves a moving love story in her new novel, An American Marriage .” – Southern Living “[A] very insightful, touching story about contemporary relationships.” – Liberty Hardy, Book Riot “Tayari Jones…beautifully weaves the repugnant racism of the judicial system into a love story. In writing as lyrical and efficient as prose, Jonesxa0presents what happens to two men and a woman when justice is denied.” — Newark Star-Ledger “Jones’s prose is masterful. An American Marriage is a must-read, not just for fans of narratives about love but for anyone who has known what is to struggle with the choice between pushing forward and letting go.” — Tulsa Book Review Tayari Jones is the author of four novels, including Silver Sparrow , The Untelling , and Leaving Atlanta . Jones holds degrees from Spelman College, Arizona State University, and the University of Iowa. A winner of numerous literary awards, she is a professor of creative writing at Emory University. Visit her website at www.tayarijones.com.

Features & Highlights

  • A
  • NEW YORK TIMES
  • AND
  • WASHINGTON POST
  • NOTABLE BOOK A 2018 BEST OF THE YEAR SELECTION OF
  • NPR
  • *
  • TIME
  • *
  • BUSTLE
  • *
  • O, THE OPRAH MAGAZINE
  • *
  • THE DALLAS MORNING NEWS
  • * AMAZON.COM OPRAH’S BOOK CLUB 2018 SELECTION
  • WINNER OF THE 2019 NAACP IMAGE AWARD FOR OUTSTANDING LITERARY WORK—FICTION
  • LONGLISTED FOR THE 2018 NATIONAL BOOK AWARD FOR FICTION
  • “A moving portrayal of the effects of a wrongful conviction on a young African-American couple.” —Barack Obama “Haunting . . . Beautifully written.” —
  • The New York Times Book Review
  • “Brilliant and heartbreaking . . . Unforgettable.” —
  • USA Today
  • “A tense and timely love story . . . Packed with brave questions about race and class.” —
  • People
  • “Compelling.” —
  • The Washington Post
  • “Deeply moving . . . thought-provoking." —Bill Gates   “Epic . . . Transcendent . . . Triumphant.” —
  • Elle
  • Newlyweds Celestial and Roy are the embodiment of both the American Dream and the New South. He is a young executive, and she is an artist on the brink of an exciting career. But as they settle into the routine of their life together, they are ripped apart by circumstances neither could have imagined. Roy is arrested and sentenced to twelve years for a crime Celestial knows he didn’t commit. Though fiercely independent, Celestial finds herself bereft and unmoored, taking comfort in Andre, her childhood friend, and best man at their wedding. As Roy’s time in prison passes, she is unable to hold on to the love that has been her center. After five years, Roy’s conviction is suddenly overturned, and he returns to Atlanta ready to resume their life together.   This stirring love story is a profoundly insightful look into the hearts and minds of three people who are at once bound and separated by forces beyond their control.
  • An American Marriage
  • is a masterpiece of storytelling, an intimate look deep into the souls of people who must reckon with the past while moving forward—with hope and pain—into the future.

Customer Reviews

Rating Breakdown

★★★★★
30%
(18.2K)
★★★★
25%
(15.2K)
★★★
15%
(9.1K)
★★
7%
(4.2K)
23%
(14K)

Most Helpful Reviews

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Married, read this book!

I added this book to my book club's reading list after it was mentioned on President Barack Obama's reading list in 2018. I read the synopsis and said, yup I think I'll like this book. Fast-forward to August 2019, I read and thoroughly enjoyed it (for the most part....I'll explain later).

Brief Synopsis: Tayari Jones relates how one day drastically changed the dynamics of Roy and Celestial's young marriage. As a sorta newly wed (3 years in), I was deeply attached to this story. Marriage isn't easy. It takes excellent communication, compromise, and growth while keeping your own individuality. Like I said, it's not easy but wonderful when both put forth reasonable effort.

Early on you start to sense something life-altering was going to happen to shatter the foundation of Roy and Celestial's marriage. Jones takes time to develop each character, to help you see their flaws along with their strengths. Then she throws in the other, that one friend who could be the death of your marriage if you're not careful. That friend is Andre in this story.

You are left trying to figure out if Roy and Celestial's marriage is strong enough to survive his incarceration and what outside factors will help or hurt that cause. In the end, most probably are satisfied with the ending. Me, not so much. I almost was, but one thing just didn't fit for me.

Since Jones tells this story from the pov's of Roy, Celestial, and Andre, I'll relate what spoke to my soul from each one's perspective. I'm pausing as I'm typing this because I don't want reveal too much and I don't know who I want to start with.....

I'll start with Celestial. Her character stresses the importance of remaining true to yourself. As her character develops, I think she begins to live more for herself. Yes, she's a wife but she's also Celestial. My husband tells me frequently not to lose just being me. We put our various roles ahead of self as men, women, mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters, and children. Don't forget to be you and make yourself happy, only YOU can do that. This is only possible when you know what happiness means to you, individually. In the end, I don't know if Celestial fully realizes this.

Moving on to Roy, growth was his means to freedom. Ego, wants versus needs, and honest self-evaluation all come to mind with Roy. He is by far my favorite character in this book. He had to grow in so many areas to be completely free. Sometimes we fight and hold on to the "idea" of something that is far from reality. It's ok to let go and it's ok to have faith in the unknown.

Finally, I'll speak on Andre. This is where my for the most part comes into play. Compromise is one thing, but NEVER EVER SETTLE. I believe this is what he did. He settled for the next best thing after being presented with evidence suggesting he should do something different. Am I alone on this thought? I don't know. You tell me.

Overall, Tayari Jones brings a realistic telling of how injustices can either tear a family apart or bring them closer together. My favorite aspect of this book were the letters written between Celestial and Roy. It gave me time to truly reflect on each's pov at a slower than normal pace. Reminds me of how early on in our dating/courtship, my husband and I used an app to write our thoughts versus a rapid fire text message. Sometimes there was an immediate reply. Other times it may take a few hours or even days. This strengthened our relationship because communication occurred with calmness, respectfulness, and love. Find what works for you and yours.

As Always,
#HappyReading

Tracey Robinson
Words For The Soul Book Club
8 people found this helpful
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A book about privilege as much as about race

Even before starting this novel most readers are probably aware this book tells the story of a middle class African American couple in Atlanta, Roy and Celestial, whose marriage is threatened by Roy going to prison. The novel is divided into four parts: 1. a brief introduction to Roy and Celestial, 2. Roy's imprisonment, 3. Roy's release and 4. Roy and Celestial's reunion. A third major character is Andre who is Celestial's default love interest. The strength of the novel is that the author keeps the reader guessing right up until the last page as to whether the marriage of Roy and Celestial will survive.
However, An American Marriage suffers from several weaknesses:
The novel is as much about privilege as it is about race. It turns out that Celestial's daddy (who sounds an awful lot like Bill Cosby's TV role as Dr. Huxtable) is pretty darn rich. He can easily afford to send Celestial to the best schools, set her up in business and bankroll Roy's legal defense and appeal. So while the characters experience some unfortunate bumps in the road, no one is down and out for very long. And the reader knows this. If there is any moral to this story it is that money may not be able to buy happiness, but it can certainly prevent or postpone a lot of unhappiness.
In parts 1, 3 & 4 the story is told from the individual viewpoints of Roy, Celestial and Andre and in part 2 from the exchange of letters between Roy and Celestial. The problem is the voices of Roy, Celestial and Andre all sound pretty much the same. Theirs is the voice of privilege. They all are college educated, bright and articulate, beautiful or nearly beautiful, and start out their lives enjoying wonderful opportunities. So it might be hard for many readers to gin up a lot of sympathy for these people.
The exchange of letters in part 2 is particularly problematic. Very few authors have effectively told their story through letters or emails. Jones is no exception. The correspondence between Roy and Celestial is somewhat stilted, over contrived, and full of eloquent, philosophical and flowery phrases. In short the letters are not believable. But worse, the exchange serves to blunt or soften the backstory of the hardship experienced by Roy in prison. Therefore, Roy's imprisonment comes across merely as an unfortunate, extended separation from his family. Essentially no different from Roy serving as extended military tour of duty or his being given a job with some overseas venture.
Four critical elements of Roy's own story are either missing or presented only in a superficial manner: Roy's alleged crime, his subsequent arrest and conviction, his prison experience and the legal effort which led to his ultimate release. I for one began the book thinking Roy did not commit the crime. By the end of the book I have to say I was not so sure.
Parts 3 & 4 of the novel cover Roy's release and eventual reunion with Celestial. The author needlessly prolongs and draws out this part of her story, maybe to keep the reader guessing. It found it somewhat annoying. The author also uses this space to provide readers with some background information on the lives of Roy, Celestial and Andre. To endear them to the reader? For me it was too late.
The ending? Neither totally satisfying nor totally happy? But, to be fair, not totally unbelievable either.
If the reader ends up caring for any characters in this book it will probably be the biological or adoptive parents and/or father/mother figures of these children of privilege. They are the ones who led often hard-scrabble lives but who still steadfastly focused their love and attention on Roy, Celestial and Andre. They are wonderful exemplars of one of the great lessons in life that it is more important to love than to be loved.
6 people found this helpful
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Great read

Very well written!! Couldn’t put it down!
5 people found this helpful
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Not a Great Book. Not even a good book.

I gave this review two stars because there are some interesting parts to the book and because she writes well overall.

The reason, however, it earned only two stars is because the book's main characters have no redeeming qualities. As a male, I cannot speak to being a woman, but Celestial to me is offensive. She keeps talking about being a strong woman, but she is the epitome of weakness--she doesn't know who she is, she acts primarily from selfishness, and she lets herself be the tool of men. You see many men attracted to her, but I don't think any of the men admire her or look up to her or consider her a person of integrity. I think she is another stereotypical weak woman. And that is a shame, if not simply insulting.

And the men who are attracted to her never really give a reason why they are attracted to her. In fact, they don't seem really to know her at all. Is she even a person to them? At times, you might see hints of that, but then they quickly fade away. And this all makes for incredibly banal dialogue--dialogue that says nothing because it's about nothing.

I doubt this book will be read by anyone in 20 years. It will quickly go out of print. There is nothing enduring in it. And the fact that such an insipid novel earns high praise tells us, sadly, much about our times.
4 people found this helpful
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Borrring.

Was boring. Only read about 4 chapters.
2 people found this helpful
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I really tried, but...

I rarely don't finish a book that I start reading. But after reading this book halfway through, I was unable to continue. It wasn't the writing, per se, but I found the characters to be selfish and egocentric to the max and I didn’t care about them. The portrayal of this "American marriage" as a norm I found to be way off the mark, and portrayed as something that I don't care to read about. They profess to have a measure of faith in God, but their lives were lived in complete sexual immorally. It was disheartening to say the least. The story itself was a bit unbelievable, how Roy could be convicted of the crime with no concrete evidence. The chances of him ending up in the same jail cell as his long-lost biological father was also a great stretch. Not sure how this book got such high reviews. It was a real disappointment.
2 people found this helpful
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Best book ive read this year

I picked this up thinking I’d read a few chapters today and more tomorrow since I was only on the 2nd chapter.... ha ha ha. That’s not how it went. #anamericanmarriage is 308 pages of perfectly crafted words that whips up a category 5 hurricane of emotions that beats you all the way down yet finds a way to bring you all the way back up to leave you shakily standing at the end. I kid you not I don’t know that I’ve ever read a book in one sitting (well I read 90% of it today) that pulled so strongly on every emotion my heart and brain knows. It truly is like a beautiful storm that touches your soul so deeply it feels like you finally have book hangover that you may not recover from. I literally went from cussing mad at chapter 2 to laughing to crying to happy to anxious to hopeful to so much more in a few hours and one book. Wow @tayari #mesmerized #bookhangover #hurricaneofemotions #bestbookivereadthisyear #5⭐️ #⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️
2 people found this helpful
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Would not recommend

I did NOT enjoy this book - the writing was mediocre at best. Told from different points of view, there was virtually no difference in which character was talking. The author then fell back into "letter writing" between characters which just made their development shallow, stagnant, and nonexistent. I couldn't tell if they had a Southern accent, an African-American dialect, and upper-white dialect, or a combo of all three. It was such a mish- mash that I'm not even sure the author herself knew what she was going for.

Now for the razor-thin plot that was see-through thin, and held no teeth. I can see what the author was attempting to do - make you feel sympathetic for a guy who was wrongfully sentenced for rape (with no actual evidence...puhleeze!), and then his wife moves on to the best friend while he's in the slammer. So predictable that I just rolled my eyes and literally skimmed the pages. But when wifey became famously rich on making dolls? It just didn't make sense. At all.

Thus, the "drama" when he gets out and his life stayed the same, and his wife can't figure out whether to stay with him or his best friend. I felt no sympathy, no compassion, no nothing for anyone in this book. The author tried, and failed, to get me to feel this. What a shame, because the storyline had real potential.

And why did the author have everyone call their parents by their first names? Is this like, a thing, in Atlanta that I am unaware of? A minor detail to be sure, but so off-putting that I had a hard time even reading their conversations. The author never stayed consistent - sometimes it was pop, dad, daddy, Big Roy, etc.

I have not been a huge fan of Oprah's Book Club choices simply because they seem to be so flimsy. Her name gives credence where credence is not necessarily due, and this is certainly the case with this book.

On to bigger, and hopefully, better books.
2 people found this helpful
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Captivating narrative

I just started this book and haven’t been able to put it down. I am immersed in the creative format of the text and the emerging details of this “American marriage”. I can’t wait to read how it all ends.
1 people found this helpful
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Highly recommend

This author has been recommended to me since Silver Sparrow was published years ago. I loved this story on so many levels, and from the first chapter I was hooked on the character's "voices." They are clever, funny, heartfelt, wise, and honest, giving me a glimpse into a world I know nothing of: what it is like to be black. You can't help but cheer for Roy throughout the story, even when he's made wrong decisions (a bit of a playboy) you know that this is a man who feels things deep down, who wants more out of life than his parents ever garnered, a man who is honest and clawing his way to put his life back together after being in prison for a crime he didn't commit.
While the story is mainly told from Celestial and Roy's POV's (a few chapters from Andre) I feel this is really Roy's story.
And it's one that I highly recommend to all.
1 people found this helpful