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HELL OF A BOOK by Jason Mott

HELL OF A BOOK

by Jason Mott

Pub Date: June 29th, 2021
ISBN: 978-0-593-33096-8
Publisher: Dutton

A Black writer's cross-country book tour becomes a profound exploration of love, friendship, and racial violence in America.

A man finds himself sprinting down the hallway of a Midwestern hotel, naked, a stranger (whose wife he's just been caught sleeping with) close on his heels. So begins our nameless narrator's book tour, which will take him around the country to promote his debut novel, Hell of a Book. As the author confronts the politics of publishing and marketing, he must answer to two very different perspectives: There are those, on the one hand, who believe in the impact of his book but wonder why he has chosen not to represent “the Black condition.” On the other hand, his media trainer advises, in a tone less flippant than sincere, that “the last thing people really want to hear about is being Black.” Meanwhile, he begins to form an unlikely friendship with a Black boy—a shadowlike, ever present 10-year-old he calls The Kid—as around them the country mourns another victim of police violence. Braided with the author’s narrative are chapters following the life of a boy referred to as Soot, which he's called by the kids in his rural Southern town on account of his very dark skin. Uncomfortable in his skin and bullied by his peers, Soot feels neither safe nor wanted in the world, withdrawing into himself and attempting to find some refuge in his imagination. When his father is murdered outside their family home, Soot finds safety in stories. As chapters alternate between the author’s and Soot’s perspectives, their narratives slowly begin to merge, unfolding into a story that is at once a paean to familial love and friendship and a reckoning with racism and police violence.

By turns playful and surprising and intimate, a moving meditation on being Black in America.