An acclaimed African American essayist puts forth a first novel whose quirky romanticism, vivid landscapes, and digressive storytelling owe more to classic European cinema than conventional literature.
The world tends to weigh heavily on a sensitive young man with an overly restive mind. And Jonah Winters, a Black, newly minted college graduate, begins the 21st century burdened with an eclectic imagination that’s hemmed in by limited possibility. Raised in Paris, Jonah is pressing his cultivated mind into service as a public school teacher in Brooklyn. He doesn’t get too deep into the new job before anomie creeps in: “infernal contradictions between his hopeful expectations and the downward spirals of aimless and angry students.” Seeking mental relief at a Manhattan repertory movie house, Jonah runs into Octavio, a “wild Cubano” and college friend who proposes they take a trip together to Brazil, where Octavio hopes to reunite with another college friend, nicknamed “Barthes,” who’s trying to help poor children in Rio’s favelas. Jonah promises to think it over but doesn’t, really, for weeks, until one night when a retired pro basketball player rescues him from arrest for drunk and disorderly. The stranger, Nathaniel Archimbald, unloads a harsh dose of “wake-up” on Jonah that forces the young man to assess his life up to that point, which in turn compels Nathan to recall a lost love from his own life in Paris. When Jonah tells him about the prospect of heading to South America, Nathaniel hands him a sealed letter addressed to that lost love, asking him to find her. If he doesn’t, “bring the letter back to me…[so] you’ll remember that you always have a reason to come back.” So begins for Jonah an odyssey through Brazil and elsewhere in the Southern Hemisphere loaded with discoveries, epiphanies, and, occasionally, physical peril looming from both within and outside his small circle of fellow travelers. At times, even with McCarthy’s allusive style and illuminating observations carrying them along, readers may become unsettled by the drift and dysfunction of its protagonist. But if ever there was an example of a quest story where the quest matters more than the objective, it’s this coming-of-age novel.
An intellectually stimulating fiction debut.