Look for Me and Ill Be Gone, John Edgar Wideman
Look for Me and Ill Be Gone, John Edgar Wideman
List: $26.99 | Sale: $18.89
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Look for Me and I'll Be Gone
Stories

Author: John Edgar Wideman

Narrator: Dion Graham, Janina Edwards

Unabridged: 11 hr

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Published: 11/09/2021


Synopsis

*A Wall Street Journal Top 10 Best Book of the Year*

From John Edgar Wideman, a modern “master of language” (The New York Times Book Review), comes a stunning story collection that spans a range of topics from Michael Jordan to Emmett Till, from childhood memories to the final day in a prison cell.

In Look For Me and I’ll Be Gone, his sixth collection of stories, John Edgar Wideman imbues with energy and life the concerns that have consistently infused his fiction and nonfiction. How does it feel to grow up in America, a nation that—despite knowing better, despite its own laws, despite experiencing for hundreds of years the deadly perils and heartbreak of racial division—encourages (sometimes unwittingly, but often on purpose) its citizens to see themselves as colored or white, as inferior or superior.

Never content merely to tell a story, Wideman seeks once again to create language that delivers passages like jazz solos, and virtuosic manipulations of time to entangle past and present. The story “Separation” begins with a boy afraid to stand alone beside his grandfather’s coffin, then wends its way back and forth from Pittsburgh to ancient Sumer. “Atlanta Murders” starts with two chickens crossing a road and becomes a dark riff, contemplating “Evidence of Things Not Seen,” James Baldwin’s report on the 1979–1981 child murders in Atlanta, Georgia.

Comprised of fictions of the highest caliber and relevancy by a writer whose imagination and intellect “prove his continued vitality...with vigor and soul” (Entertainment Weekly), Look For Me and I’ll Be Gone will entrance and surprise committed Wideman fans and newcomers alike.

About John Edgar Wideman

John Edgar Wideman’s books include, among others, Languages of Home, SlaveroadLook for Me and I’ll Be GoneYou Made Me Love YouThe Homewood Trilogy, American HistoriesWriting to Save a LifeBrothers and KeepersPhiladelphia FireHoop Roots, and Sent for You Yesterday. He won the PEN/Faulkner Award twice and has twice been a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award and National Book Award. He is a MacArthur Fellow and a recipient of the Lannan Literary Award for Lifetime Achievement, and the PEN/Malamud Award for Excellence in the Short Story. He divides his time between New York and France.


Reviews

There is so much between these pages. I am still processing it all. It is raw and deep and full of emotion. These are powerful stories of past and present. A necessary read.......more

Goodreads review by Andre

John Edgar Wideman is a writer's writer. Often deep and complex in ways that generally only other writers readily grasp and easily absorb. This is not to declare, as one might assume from that second sentence that his work is inaccessible, but as Toni Morrison once remarked "passion is never enough,......more

Here I sit about to write a review about a book I read on the 6 train; riding back and forth between Manhattan and the Bronx. Or is this a story about a person about to write a review for a book they read on the 6 train? Who is this character about to write this review? Maybe they are the person sit......more

Goodreads review by Kemp

I learned more about race issues from this book than I’ve taken from the likes of So You Want to Talk About Race or How to Be an Antiracist. John Edgar Wideman spills his heart, educates us, and entertains us. What I liked best about this writing is that JEW creates empathy with strong, evocative wor......more


Quotes

"Narrator Dion Graham delivers these discursive stream-of-consciousness stories in a powerful, resonant style. His strong articulation, careful tone, and calibrated pace create an engaging listening experience. A much celebrated creator of fiction, Wideman crafts experiments in prose that share his insights into life as a Black American. He has succeeded at every level but is haunted by his incarcerated son and sibling, race, and the past. He writes breathlessly about his youth in Pittsburgh, his time at Oxford, and his fraught success as a man of letters. Wideman’s prose enchants. Graham and Edwards bring these semi-autobiographical fictions luminously to life and give this audiobook a gritty reality."