Saturday, July 28, 2012

Percival Everett

Just about all you can find out about Percival Everett—the author of Assumption, our book for August—on the internet is pretty much what you can get from reading the back of your book.  He was born in 1956, graduated from Brown University, has had more than 20 books, teaches at the University of Southern California, and is married to another writer, Danzy Senna.

Two of his novels are available at the San Leandro Library:

Wounded (2008), about an upper-middle-class black man, John Hunt, who has attended a private prep school and studied art at Berkeley, who chucked it all to become a horse trainer in Wyoming because of the sheer beauty of the country. John's life has reached a kind of equilibrium, when a young man who has worked for him occasionally as a ranch hand is murdered in an apparent homophobic hate crime.

Erasure (2002) Thelonious "Monk" Ellison is an academic and a writer of very intellectual experimental novels. He has simultaneously been told that his novels are not marketable because they don't tap into the "black experience" and found one his novels (if I recall correctly, based on themes of ancient Persian mythology) filed in the "African American Literature" section of the local big-box book store, because if you're an African American writer, that's where your books go, no matter what they are about. Monk has had to go back home to the suburban DC area  (in the heat of summer) because of a family crisis, which unravels into a series of cascading crises. At the same time, the hottest best-seller that summer is a book called We's Lives in Da Ghetto, written by a college-educated middle-class writer like himself, a book that offends Monk on multiple levels. In response (and under the influence, if I recall correctly), Monk writes his own "blaxploitation" novel, My Pafology, even more offensive and over-the-top than the other book. He puts it on the market under a pseudonym, and it becomes a runaway best seller.

Here is a brief clip from an interview with Percival Everett:




Saturday, July 21, 2012

Updates

If you look at the "Pages" menu to the left, you will note that I have added a new page, "Lit Links," which is a work in progress borrowed from the old links on Lori's original Readers Roundtable blog. I have been going through and testing all her old links,  updating them when possible, and adding new ones that you have told me about or that I have come across myself in my meanderings across the internet.

I have also updated the "Coming Up!" and "Booklists" pages to reflect the books we are going to read and the books we have already read. Please let me know if anything needs correction.

Friday, July 13, 2012

Saturday, July 14, 2012, at 2 p.m.

Farewell to Manzanar by Jeanne Wakatsuki Houston
 
From Peggy:  There will be two book groups for Farewell to Manzanar on Saturday.  RRTable will be in Conference Room B, so take note. Lori has offered to bring cookies for our group so come wanting dessert! Thank you Lori! She will also have some surveys and sign ups sheets we will need to fill out for the grant reporting.