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Seen It All and Done the Rest by Pearl Cleage — book cover

Seen It All and Done the Rest

by Pearl Cleage
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Overview

For Josephine Evans, home was on the stages of the world where she spent thirty years establishing herself as one of the finest actresses of her generation. Josephine was the toast of Europe, and her fabulous apartment in Amsterdam’s theater district was a popular gathering place for an international community of artists, actors, and expatriates who considered themselves true citizens of the world. Josephine lived above and beyond the reach of conventional definitions of who and what an African American diva could be, and her legions of loyal fans loved her for it. She had a perfect life and enough sense to live it to the hilt, but then a war she didn’t fully understand turned everything upside down, thrusting her into a role she never wanted and was not prepared to play. Suddenly the target of angry protests aimed at the country she had never really felt was her own, Josephine is forced to return to America to see if she can create a new definition of home.

Camping out with her granddaughter, Zora, who is housesitting in Atlanta’s West End; and trying to avoid the unwanted attentions of Dig It!, the city’s brand-new gossip magazine, Josephine struggles to reclaim her old life even as she scrambles to shape her new one. Hoping her friend Howard Denmond is as good as his word when he promises to engineer her triumphant return to the European stage, Josephine sets out to increase her nest egg by selling the house her mother willed her, only to find the long-neglected property has become home to squatters who have no intention of leaving.

But an unexpected reunion with an old friend offers Josephine a chance to set things right. Spurning an offer from unscrupulous land developer Greer Woodruff, Josephine gathers new friends around her, including Victor Causey, a lawyer whose addictions left him homeless but still determined to protect his mother; Louie Baptiste, a displaced New Orleans chef hoping to return to the city he loves; and Aretha Hargrove, recovering from her role in the same scandal that sent Zora running for cover. As Greer gets serious about her plan to tear the community apart, Josephine finds herself playing the most important role of her life, showing her neighbors what courage really is and learning the true meaning of coming home.

Synopsis

For Josephine Evans, home was on the stages of the world where she spent thirty years establishing herself as one of the finest actresses of her generation. Josephine was the toast of Europe, and her fabulous apartment in Amsterdam’s theater district was a popular gathering place for an international community of artists, actors, and expatriates who considered themselves true citizens of the world. Josephine lived above and beyond the reach of conventional definitions of who and what an African American diva could be, and her legions of loyal fans loved her for it. She had a perfect life and enough sense to live it to the hilt, but then a war she didn’t fully understand turned everything upside down, thrusting her into a role she never wanted and was not prepared to play. Suddenly the target of angry protests aimed at the country she had never really felt was her own, Josephine is forced to return to America to see if she can create a new definition of home.

Camping out with her granddaughter, Zora, who is housesitting in Atlanta’s West End; and trying to avoid the unwanted attentions of Dig It!, the city’s brand-new gossip magazine, Josephine struggles to reclaim her old life even as she scrambles to shape her new one. Hoping her friend Howard Denmond is as good as his word when he promises to engineer her triumphant return to the European stage, Josephine sets out to increase her nest egg by selling the house her mother willed her, only to find the long-neglected property has become home to squatters who have no intention of leaving.

But an unexpected reunion with an old friend offers Josephine a chance to set things right. Spurning an offer from unscrupulous land developer Greer Woodruff, Josephine gathers new friends around her, including Victor Causey, a lawyer whose addictions left him homeless but still determined to protect his mother; Louie Baptiste, a displaced New Orleans chef hoping to return to the city he loves; and Aretha Hargrove, recovering from her role in the same scandal that sent Zora running for cover. As Greer gets serious about her plan to tear the community apart, Josephine finds herself playing the most important role of her life, showing her neighbors what courage really is and learning the true meaning of coming home.

About the Author, Pearl Cleage

Pearl Cleage is the author of What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day . . . , an Oprah’s Book Club selection; Some Things I Never Thought I’d Do, a Good Morning America Read This! book club pick; Babylon Sisters, for which she was named the 2006 Go On Girl! Book Club Author of the Year; and Baby Brother’s Blues, winner of the 2006 NAACP Image Award and the African American Literary Award for fiction. She is the author of two works of nonfiction: Mad at Miles: A Black Woman’s Guide to Truth and Deals with the Devil and Other Reasons to Riot; as well as the poem We Speak Your Names. She is also an accomplished dramatist whose plays include Flyin’ West and Blues for an Alabama Sky. Cleage lives in Atlanta with her husband, Zaron W. Burnett, Jr.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly

This jaunty but topical coming-of-middle-age story from Cleage (Baby Brother's Blues) opens with an indignant argument about American culpability in the Iraq war, as African-American actress Josephine Evans-a self-proclaimed "Las Vegas of grandmothers" living and working in Amsterdam-has just been fired from a theater production, ostensibly for being too American. She returns to Atlanta to spend time with her granddaughter Zora, recently undone by her peripheral role in a splashy murder case, and to check on her family house. Josephine is hoping to keep Zora's trust while steering her away from Zora's father's tragic bout with alcohol. After seeing the cracked-out wreckage of her stretch of Atlanta's West End, Josephine also embarks on a plan with four other women to fix up her vandalized manse, a plan that includes the squatter she discovers there, Victor Causey. The plot is predictable but satisfying, and Josephine's voice comes through movingly throughout. (Mar.)

Copyright 2007 Reed Business Information

Library Journal

Cleage's (Baby Brother's Blues ) new novel gives us yet another glimpse into Atlanta's West End community and introduces new characters and new scandals. Josephine Evans, an African American actress with a successful theater career in Amsterdam, finds her livelihood threatened when the Iraq War makes her the target of an anti-American protest. Josephine decides to travel back to Atlanta to nurture her granddaughter, Zora, who is drinking heavily since being hounded by the press for her involvement in a murder scandal. But Zora isn't Josephine's only rescue mission: the house Josephine inherited from her mother is in ruins. Cleage tackles several subjects-patriotism, legacy, crime, and urban renewal-with such style that this hodgepodge story line actually comes together smoothly. Recommended for all public libraries and African American fiction collections.-Carol Johnson, Cleveland P.L.

Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

Predictable tale of a woman going back home and helping her struggling community. Thirty years ago, African-American actress Josephine Evans landed on tour in Amsterdam and never came back. Now 58, she's enjoyed decent success as the leading lady of a respected local theater. If the charismatic Josephine had stuck to narrating her interesting life history, this novel from Cleage (Baby Brother's Blues, 2006, etc.) might have been an enjoyable character study. Regrettably, a conventional plot gets in the way. Suspended from her theater company (the director claims that Iraq-inspired anti-American sentiment makes it impossible for her to open the season), Josephine decides to take a trip to Atlanta to cosset her granddaughter Zora. Peripherally involved in a scandalous murder trial, trailed by paparazzi working for a local gossip magazine, the depressed Zora is pounding the booze and has dropped out of college in her senior year. She wants to escape the city, and Josephine figures she can help out by selling the house her mother left her in Atlanta. Unfortunately, the place is a mess. Rented out for years, it's been stripped of everything valuable, and its once-glorious garden now serves as the neighborhood's unofficial dump. Local developers want to scam Josephine into selling for a pittance, of course: They have big plans and she's in the way. (They'll stop at nothing to get her corner lot!) Instead, Josephine and Zora and a few other likeminded, good-hearted ladies decide to resurrect the neighborhood one house at a time. Zora films the entire reconstruction for the web, and now Josephine is a star in the United States, plus they're clamoring for her return in Amsterdam. Should she goback to Europe? Develop a grassroots neighborhood revival in Atlanta with Zora? Will the corrupt developers get their comeuppance?Good intentions, good politics and a spirited heroine can't salvage the paint-by-numbers plot. Agent: Howard Rosenstone/Rosenstone/Wender

Book Details

Published
February 24, 2009
Publisher
Random House Publishing Group
Pages
320
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780345481139

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