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Book cover of Sweet St. Louis
African Americans - Fiction & Literature

Sweet St. Louis

by Omar Tyree
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Overview

When Anthony "Ant" Poole, a young auto mechanic with a creative approach to the mating game, tries out his latest line on Sharron Francis, he has no idea of the impact it will have. For Sharron, an ordinary girl in search of companionship and happiness, Ant's words are filled with mystery and allure. Would she really be getting an actual piece of him, or just a piece period? The more Sharron contemplates Ant's line, the more it confounds her. When she decides the only way for her to discover its meaning is to discover Ant for herself, both her life and his are turned upside down.

A seductive, insightful look at the age-old question: How do people fall in love -- and stay in love?

About the Author, Omar Tyree

New York Times bestselling author Omar Tyree is the winner of the 2001 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Workβ€”Fiction, and the 2006 Phillis Wheatley Literary Award for Body of Work in Urban Fiction. His books include Boss Lady, Diary of a Groupie, Leslie, Just Say No!, For the Love of Money, Sweet St. Louis, Single Mom, A Do Right Man, and Flyy Girl. He lives in Charlotte, North Carolina. To learn more about Omar Tyree, visit his website at OmarTyree.com.

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

"Hey, miss?... You wanna make a trade with me?... A piece of me for a piece of you." Anthony "Ant" Poole, a young African-American auto mechanic, believes he has a flair for pick-up lines in this overblown but lively romance by Tyree (Fly Girl). Against the hectic contemporary urban backdrop of St. Louis, Ant competes with his best friend, small-time criminal Anthony "Tone" Wallace, for dates. His days as a carefree Romeo are numbered, however, when he meets old-fashioned girl Sharron Francis, an airline caterer, who is trying to end an affair with a married man. Even Celena, Sharron's man-eating best friend, is jealous of Sharron's budding romance. Though Tyree relies on stereotypes and his prose is studded with distracting italics, his charting of his characters' inner motives is on target when he gets past surface description. The novel works best when the characters are one-on-one, deep in the lengthy conversations that fuel the narrative. Much as Ant bemoans the difficulties of dating a "thinking woman," he soon finds himself turning into a thinking man. Or as he says to Sharron's father: "Your daughter made me express myself." Still, even after Sharron rejects an old flame in favor of her new love, the commitment-phobic Ant can't quite give up his hunt for new conquests. It is finally a chastisement from one of his victims and a sobering night in jail that cause him to see the error of his ways. Tyree's checkered but entertaining street romance is a raucous cautionary tale steeped in the impulsiveness, verve and arrogance of youth. (Oct.) Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

Library Journal

Handsome Anthony "Ant" Poole is a "player." He's heavy into the life of "love 'em and leave 'em" when he collides with Sharron Francis on a night out with his longtime best friend, Tone. Ant, reaccessing his life as a player, and Sharron, fed up with the single female's position in the African American culture of the 1990s, think of getting serious about love and life but just don't know how to begin. Dropping the first-person narrative, which hindered the plotting of his A Do Right Man, Tyree is back in form with crisp, realistic dialog. Unfortunately, his explicit language is back, too. His characters' conversations seldom venture beyond sex and whether to "do it" or not. Still, Tyree's novel will have broad appeal to twentysomething singles. For large fiction collections.--Shirley Gibson Coleman, Ann Arbor Dist. Lib., MI Copyright 1999 Cahners Business Information.

From the Publisher

Rapport magazine Prolific writer Omar Tyree has outdone himself again. Sweet St. Louis, like Flyy Girl, will definitely find an audience.

Black Issues Book Review [Tyree's] most impressive novel to date.

Book Details

Published
August 21, 2000
Publisher
New York : Simon & Schuster, 1999.
Pages
368
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780684856100

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