Disgruntled
Asali Solomon
Fiction So472d
Kenya Curtis is only eight years old, but she knows that she's
different, even if she can't put her finger on how or why. It's not
because she's black--most of the other students in the fourth-grade
class at her West Philadelphia elementary school are too. Maybe it's
because she celebrates Kwanzaa, or because she's forbidden from reciting
the Pledge of Allegiance. Maybe it's because she calls her father--a
housepainter-slash-philosopher--"Baba" instead of "Daddy," or because
her parents' friends gather to pour out libations "from the Creator, for
the Martyrs" and discuss "the community."
Kenya does know that
it's connected to what her Baba calls "the shame of being alive"--a
shame that only grows deeper and more complex over the course of Asali
Solomon's long-awaited debut novel. Disgruntled, effortlessly
funny and achingly poignant, follows Kenya from West Philadelphia to the
suburbs, from public school to private, from childhood through
adolescence, as she grows increasingly disgruntled by her inability to
find any place or thing or person that feels like home.
A
coming-of-age tale, a portrait of Philadelphia in the late eighties and
early nineties, an examination of the impossible double-binds of race, Disgruntled
is a novel about the desire to rise above the limitations of the
narratives we're given and the painful struggle to craft fresh ones we
can call our own.
(From Amazon.)
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