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Produktbild: Harlem Shuffle
Band 1

Harlem Shuffle A Novel

Aus der Reihe The Harlem Trilogy
1

12,69 €

inkl. gesetzl. MwSt., zzgl. Versandkosten


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Beschreibung

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

7342

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

09.08.2022

Verlag

Random House LLC US

Seitenzahl

336

Maße (L/B/H)

19,9/12,9/2 cm

Gewicht

246 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-525-56727-1

Beschreibung

Rezension

A NEW YORK TIMES NOTABLE BOOK OF THE YEAR NATIONAL BOOK CRITICS CIRCLE NOMINEE New York Times Book Review 100 Notable Books of the Year One of The Washington Posts 50 Notable Works of Fiction of the Year TIME Magazine 100 Must Read Books of the Year One of the Best Books of the Year: NPR, Slate, Boston Globe, Town & Country, Vulture, and more One of President Obama's Favorite Books of the Year One of The New York Times Critics' Best Books of the Year

A rich, wild book that could pass for genre fiction. It s much more, but the entertainment value alone should ensure it the same kind of popular success that greeted his last two novels, The Underground Railroad and The Nickel Boys."
Janet Maslin, The New York Times

One of the Ten Best Books of 2021
Laura Miller, Slate

Colson Whitehead has a couple of Pulitzers under his belt, along with several other awards celebrating his outstanding novels. Harlem Shuffle is a suspenseful crime thriller that's sure to add to the tally it's a fabulous novel you must read.
NPR.org

A warm, involving novel
The Wall Street Journal

A a fiendishly clever romp, a heist novel that s also a morality play about respectability politics, a family comedy disguised as a noir Harlem Shuffle reads like a book whose author had enormous fun writing it. The dialogue crackles and sparks; the zippy heist plot twists itself in one showy misdirection after another. Most impressive of all is lovable family-man Ray, whose relentless ambition drives the plot forward while his glib salesman s patter keeps you guessing about his true intentions. This book is a blast that will make you think, and what could be better than that?
Vox

Another triumph from Pulitzer winner Whitehead
People Magazine

Fast-paced, keen-eyed and very funny, Harlem Shuffle is a novel about race, power and the history of Harlem all disguised as a thrill-ride crime novel.
San Francisco Chronicle

Enthralling, cinematic Whitehead's evocation of early 1960s Harlem strewn with double-crosses and double standards, broken glass and broken dreams is irresistible a valentine to a time and place.
Minneapolis Star-Tribune

Dazzling exciting and wise.
Walton Muyumba, The Boston Globe

A spectacularly pleasurable read, and while it is, of course, literary, it s also a pure, unapologetic crime-fiction page-turner.
Los Angeles Times

Harlem Shuffle is a wildly entertaining romp. But as you might expect with this two-time Pulitzer Prize winner and MacArthur genius, Whitehead also delivers a devastating, historically grounded indictment of the separate and unequal lives of Blacks and whites in mid-20th century New York."
Associated Press

An American master
New York Times Book Review

Two-time Pulitzer winner Whitehead (The Nickel Boys) returns with a sizzling heist novel set in civil rights era Harlem. It s 1959 and Ray Carney has built an unlikely kingdom selling used furniture. A husband, a father, and the son of a man who once worked as muscle for a local crime boss, Carney is only slightly bent when it [comes] to being crooked. But when his cousin Freddie whose stolen goods Carney occasionally fences through his furniture store decides to rob the historic Hotel Theresa, a lethal cast of underworld figures enter Carney s life, among them the mobster Chink Montague, known for his facility with a straight razor ; WWII veteran Pepper; and the murderous, purple-suited Miami Joe, Whitehead s answer to No Country for Old Men s Anton Chigurh. These and other characters force Carney to decide just how bent he wants to be. It s a superlative story, but the most impressive achievement is Whitehead s loving depiction of a Harlem 60 years gone that rustling, keening thing of people and concrete which lands as detailed and vivid as Joyce s Dublin. Don t be surprised if this one wins Whitehead another major award.
Publishers Weekly, Starred Review

Whitehead adds another genre to an ever-diversifying portfolio with his first crime novel, and it's a corker. Ray Carney owns a furniture store in Harlem. When the novel begins in 1959, he's selling mostly used furniture, struggling to escape the legacy of his criminal father. Living taught you, Ray believes, that you didn't have to live the way you'd been taught. Almost. Ray's ne'erdo-well cousin, Freddie, who's been luring Ray into hot water since childhood ( I didn't mean to get you in trouble, is Freddie's constant refrain) regularly brings Ray the odd piece of jewelry, provenance unknown, which Ray peddles to a dealer downtown, building a stake to invest in his business. There was a natural flow of goods in and out and through people's lives . . . a churn of property, and Ray facilitated that churn. It works until Freddie suggests Ray as a fence for a jewel heist at the Hotel Theresa ( the Waldorf of Harlem ), and suddenly the churn produces a potentially disastrous backwash. Following Ray as his business grows and he delicately balances the crooked and straight sides of his life, Whitehead delivers a portrait of Harlem in the early 60s, culminating with the Harlem Riot of 1964, that is brushed with lovingly etched detail and features a wonderful panoply of characters who spring to full-bodied life, blending joy, humor, and tragedy. A triumph on every level.
Booklist, Starred Review

Produktdetails

Verkaufsrang

7342

Einband

Taschenbuch

Erscheinungsdatum

09.08.2022

Verlag

Random House LLC US

Seitenzahl

336

Maße (L/B/H)

19,9/12,9/2 cm

Gewicht

246 g

Sprache

Englisch

ISBN

978-0-525-56727-1

Herstelleradresse

Libri GmbH
Europaallee 1
36244 Bad Hersfeld
DE

Email: GPSR Kontakt

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  • Miss.mesmerized

    4/5

    08.09.2021

    Buch (Gebundene Ausgabe)

    Colson Whitehead - Harlem Shuffle

    Ray Carney just wants to lead decent life as a black furniture salesman at the beginning of the 1960s in Harlem. His wife Elizabeth is expecting their second child and even if his in-laws are not happy with him, his life is quite ok. His cousin Freddie shows up from time to time with some bargains and Ray does not ask too many questions about the origins of the odd sofa or necklace. But when Freddie and a bunch of crooks plan to rob the Hotel Theresa – something like Harlem’s Waldorf – and as for his help to get rid of the loot, his life becomes a lot more complicated especially since Ray quickly understands that there is not much room for negotiation. With “The Underground Railroad” and “The Nickel Boys” Colson Whitehead has catapulted himself at the top of the list of contemporary writers. Just as in his former works, “Harlem Shuffle” brilliantly captures the mood and the atmosphere of the time it is set in. It only takes a couple of pages to get a feeling of 125th street of the time and first and foremost, how people experienced the riots after the shooting of an unarmed black boy by a policeman. Thus, even though the plot is set sixty years in the past, he succeeds in connecting it to present day events and issues. “The way he saw it, living taught you that you didn’t have to live the way you’d been taught to live- You came from one place but more important was where you decided to go.” Ray has decided for a decent life with his furniture store, he keeps to himself and his family and does not want to get involved too much in any criminal doings. He has grown up with broken glass on the playground, killings where just a side note of everyday life. Yet, Freddie is his cousin and blood ultimately is thicker than water. They have grown up like brothers and the bond cannot easily be cut even though this time, it means serious consequences. The novel develops slowly but it is those seemingly unrelated marginalia that provide the depth of the story and create the atmosphere on which the story lives. A great novel vividly written and definitely worth reading, however, I am not as enthusiastic as I was after reading his former novels.

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  • Produktbild: Harlem Shuffle