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Book cover of Strivers Row
Fiction, Fiction Subjects

Strivers Row

by Kevin Baker
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Overview

The Rev. Jonah Dove is the son of a legendary Harlem minister, and a man troubled in both mind and spirit. He feels himself unworthy and incapable of taking up the burden of running his church from the larger–than–life figure who is his father. He is haunted both by his own, shameful history of "passing" as a white man in college, and by the prospects for his people in the harsh, new, racist age he fears the world is entering. Malcolm Little –– better known as Malcom X –– is a teenage hustler from Lansing, Michigan by way of Boston, a young man on the make, trying always to be something bigger, tougher, savvier, and more confident than he really is.

On his way to New York, Malcolm happens to come to the rescue of Jonah and his wife, Amanda, when they are attacked by some drunken soldiers on the train. From then on, their paths cross repeatedly as they each go about trying to find what they really want out of the roiling, wartime city, until the moment when Harlem finally erupts around them, as a people driven beyond endurance strikes out blindly at all the forces keeping it entrapped in misery and hopelessness. Stranded on the streets of a rioting city, Jonah and Malcolm meet each other once more, as they come to grips with what they are and what the future will hold for them.

Synopsis

The Rev. Jonah Dove is the son of a legendary Harlem minister, and a man troubled in both mind and spirit. He feels himself unworthy and incapable of taking up the burden of running his church from the larger–than–life figure who is his father. He is haunted both by his own, shameful history of "passing" as a white man in college, and by the prospects for his people in the harsh, new, racist age he fears the world is entering. Malcolm Little –– better known as Malcom X –– is a teenage hustler from Lansing, Michigan by way of Boston, a young man on the make, trying always to be something bigger, tougher, savvier, and more confident than he really is.

On his way to New York, Malcolm happens to come to the rescue of Jonah and his wife, Amanda, when they are attacked by some drunken soldiers on the train. From then on, their paths cross repeatedly as they each go about trying to find what they really want out of the roiling, wartime city, until the moment when Harlem finally erupts around them, as a people driven beyond endurance strikes out blindly at all the forces keeping it entrapped in misery and hopelessness. Stranded on the streets of a rioting city, Jonah and Malcolm meet each other once more, as they come to grips with what they are and what the future will hold for them.

The New York Times - Pete Hamill

In the end, Baker has written a brave, honorable work, taking us into a vanished world that should be better known. More important, he imagines his human subjects with a sense of pity and compassion and embrace, thus making them visible in ways that are fresh and new.

About the Author, Kevin Baker

Kevin Baker is the bestselling author of the novels Dreamland, Paradise Alley, and Sometimes You See It Coming. He is a columnist for American Heritage magazine and a regular contributor to the New York Times, Harper's, and other periodicals. He lives in New York City with his wife, the writer Ellen Abrams, and their cat, Stella.

Reviews

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Editorials

New York Times Book Review

"Baker plunges audaciously into the world of Harlem in the early 1940’s ... fresh and new."

Washington Post MediaMix

"Transporting … Baker’s evocation of old Harlem is intoxicating and jampacked with colorful details."

Entertainment Weekly

"Ambitious, at times transcendent .... brings to vibrant life a notable chapter in New York City history."

Atlanta Journal-Constitution

"A grand historical drama … captivating … the novel comes fully alive, rife with possibilities."

Pittsburgh Tribune-Review

"Genius … sprawling, chaotic, noisy and intriguing as its setting, New York City."

Boston Globe

"An ambitious, cinematic tale…Kevin Baker is a rare talent."

Rolling Stone

"Kevin Baker, the lit world’s sharpest chronicler of New York’s past, scores again."

USA Today

"Ambitious [and] well-researched."

Los Angeles Times

"Daring … [Baker is] the best writer of historical fiction currently practicing."

Washington Post

"Nobody makes historical fiction burn like Kevin Baker."

Pete Hamill

In the end, Baker has written a brave, honorable work, taking us into a vanished world that should be better known. More important, he imagines his human subjects with a sense of pity and compassion and embrace, thus making them visible in ways that are fresh and new.
— The New York Times

Ron Charles

Nobody makes historical fiction burn like Kevin Baker.
— The Washington Post

Publishers Weekly

Penny's luscious baritone brings to life the denizens of Strivers Row and 125th Street in Harlem. He doesn't raise his voice to a higher pitch to create the novel's women, but he produces such a unique cadence, accent and intonation for each individual that the listener knows exactly which characters are speaking, whether they are black or white, upper or lower class. Though Penny's voice doesn't sound like Malcolm X, one of the novel's two main protagonists, his characterization captures the personality of the young Malcolm. Penny's rendition of Rev. Jonah Dove's last sermon is a monologue worthy of a stage performance. Blues riffs nicely frame the beginning and end of each CD. The overly long tracks-only six to eight per CD-might cause those without minute counters or resume controls to have to search for their place or re-listen to major portions. Harper has added a nice touch: titles for each track printed on each CD. However, the tiny silver print on an orange background makes it hard to read. Sit back and enjoy a fast-paced, beautifully wrought novel about the Harlem of World War II. Simultaneous release with the HarperCollins hardcover (Reviews, Dec. 5, 2005). (Feb.) Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Library Journal

Each novel in Baker's "City of Fire" trilogy highlights a pivotal event in New York City history: the Triangle Shirt Waist Factory fire of 1911 (Dreamland), Civil War draft riots of 1863 (Paradise Alley), and, finally, World War II and the racial tensions it exacerbated (Strivers Row). Seamlessly blending the historic and the fictitious, this book (named after Harlem's two most prestigious blocks) primarily documents events in the lives of the fictional preacher Jonah Dove, son of the founder of one of Harlem's greatest churches, and the historical Malcolm Little, a street hustler on the verge of discovering Islam who eventually becomes black nationalist leader Malcolm X. However, perhaps the most memorable character in this novel brimming with unforgettable characters is 1943 Harlem itself. Baker richly describes the good in the city-ebullient dances at the Savoy, wild rent parties where the "King Kong" (homemade corn whiskey) flowed-as well as the bad-motorcycle police patrols encountering angry mobs, restaurants refusing to seat black patrons. Thomas Anthony Penny masterfully portrays all these vibrant individuals-from fiery preachers to Irish politicos to street pimps. Essential for all literary fiction collections.-Beth Farrell, Portage Cty. Dist. Lib., OH Copyright 2006 Reed Business Information.

Kirkus Reviews

World War II Harlem is the setting for the parallel stories of a preacher (invented) and a hustler (the future Malcolm X) in Baker's fourth novel, which concludes his New York-based trilogy. A Harlem minister, Jonah Dove, is returning by train to New York from Martha's Vineyard with his wife Amanda. Jonah, light enough to pass for white, and his much darker wife are saved from a mob of racist soldiers by an intrepid railroad sandwich man, 18-year-old Malcolm Little, leaving Jonah feeling impotent and humiliated. His famous father Milton (now 94) once led former slaves out of Virginia to form his first congregation. On retirement, he installed Jonah as his successor and even arranged his marriage; no surprise, then, that Jonah feels unworthy of his congregation and the too-perfect Amanda. Meanwhile, Malcolm, new to Harlem, is like a kid at Christmas, checking out the Savoy, Small's Paradise and an anything-goes rent party. He falls in love with a beautiful white girl at the Savoy; he works as a waiter, a numbers runner, a drug dealer and a john-walker; he even has visions of Elijah Muhammad, though this reckless young blood has yet to touch bottom. Baker alternates between his two leads (goodbye, narrative momentum) while dipping frequently into their pasts. Scenes from Malcolm's grim Michigan childhood are interwoven with striking vignettes of Elijah and Wallace Fard, his bizarre mentor; Jonah's darkest hour occurred after rejection by his college buddies (they discovered he was colored). Affecting both men is a Harlem seething with anger at its army of occupation (the white cops) while black soldiers are being brutalized down South. Baker ends with an unlikely transformation. WimpyJonah, who has even botched his brief the-hell-with-it-all departure from home and church, returns to deliver a triumphant sermon, rescue Malcolm from a cop and defuse a race riot. Baker the social historian (he's pretty good) trumps the novelist (not so hot) in this overstuffed novel whose parts are better than the whole.

Book Details

Published
January 1, 2007
Publisher
HarperCollins Publishers
Pages
592
Format
Paperback
ISBN
9780060955199

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