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Grace

Audiobook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

Trinidad-born Justin Peters is a Harvard-educated literature professor whose focus on the works of "Dead White Men" receives little professional respect at the public Brooklyn college where he teaches. But whatever troubles he might have at work are eclipsed when he realizes his wife, Sally, is no longer certain about their life together. Once a poet, now a teacher and nearly forty, Harlem-born Sally wants something more. If Sally and Justin's union is to survive (along with four-year-old daughter Giselle), both must face the crippling echoes of their own pasts before those memories forever cloud and alter their future.

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    • AudioFile Magazine
      Sally Peters's unhappiness with the state of her life and her need to find more meaning in living cause her husband to examine his own attitudes toward marriage. Their search for a way to accommodate each other leads them both into their pasts. Elizabeth Nunez reads her own prose. Her colorful West Indies accent overcomes the locale of the book, which is set in Brooklyn, but the tenor of the story is lost in the sameness of the word sounds. Although the novel is exquisitely written, one would better appreciate hearing it with more vocal variety in the setting of scene and pace. J.P. (c) AudioFile 2003, Portland, Maine
    • Publisher's Weekly

      January 20, 2003
      Nunez's latest (after Discretion) is a perceptive and moving tale of an African-American middle-class marriage struggling to right itself amid tremors of self-discovery. Both Justin Peters, a professor of literature at a college in Brooklyn, and his wife, Sally, a primary school teacher, have sacrificed a great deal in making their way in white America. Justin, a Trinidadian Harvard graduate, adheres fiercely to the "Dead White Men" of the classical canon, despite his college's party line of Afrocentricity. Sally, whose father was murdered by the Ku Klux Klan, abandoned her ambitions to be a poet after the violent death of her former lover. Yet their comfortable life with their four-year-old daughter, Giselle, is not enough for Sally, who informs Justin that she needs "space" and moves in with her best friend. Bewildered by and critical of what he sees as Sally's feminist platitudes, Justin suspects lesbianism, seeing a parallel with his own troubled student, Mark, who discovers that his girlfriend is sleeping with her white female professor. Sally's inability to articulate what she lacks feeds Justin's feelings of helplessness, underscored by a colleague's accusations of Uncle Tomism. In exquisitely tuned prose, Nunez depicts a man's lonely attempt to save his marriage while honoring his roots. Adopting Justin's sage, reasoned point of view tempered by the Great Books he teaches, Nunez allows the narrative to unfold with understated elegance. Although Sally's existential struggle often seems unfocused and simplistic, Justin must learn to reacquaint himself with the woman he loves. As in most of life, there is no shattering epiphany here but, rather, a subtly shaded landscape, at once familiar and pitted with hidden challenges. Agent, Ivy Fischer Stone.

    • AudioFile Magazine
      The conceit of a narrator speaking from the grave has been done before, but rarely has it been as emotionally wrenching as in Natashia De—n's mesmerizing debut novel. Narrator Lisa Renée Pitts delivers the intricately woven story spanning 30 years in the lives of a family of women slaves. After scenes of sexual violence and a murderous bloodbath, 15-year-old pregnant Naomi attempts to escape but is shot by slave catchers. Before she dies, she gives birth to Grace, a light-skinned child who is taken from her and adopted. Naomi's spirit follows the child, now called Josey, and, through flashbacks, Pitts reveals lives filled with humiliation, dehumanization, and hopelessness. She presents De—n's characters and unrelenting images truthfully, exposing how little women, particularly African-American women, were valued in this time period. S.J.H. Winner of AudioFile Earphones Award © AudioFile 2016, Portland, Maine

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