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Sing, Unburied, Sing
November 2022: Book Club
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Sing, Unburied, Sing by Jesmyn Ward - 4 stars
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I did give it the full 5 stars and suspect that it made my top 10 list for the year I read it. It seems that I failed to write a review for it.
I love Jesmyn Ward's writing.

Definitely worth googling to read it both if you have read Sing, Unburied, Sing or just interested in her writing in general.


It’s magical realism, with a focus on the realism. She makes it feel honest and spiritual, not like a paranormal fantasy story. Louise Erdrich does this too. Her culture believes ghosts are real, and she writes them respectfully. It’s not just a trope or gimmick.
I’ll look for that interview. I read this a few years ago, and now i want to read it again. Maybe I’ll read Salvage the Bones


It was for me much lighter and easy to read than I initially expected. I kept putting it off month after month thinking it would be too serious or disturbing. (It had been in my TBR for some years but needed to read it for PS prompt winner of Anisfield-Wolfe award.) In fact, while reading it I was reminded a bit of Black Water Sister, though that is about asian diaspora and dealing with family history, kegacy, and ghosts rather than a history of violence and racism.
How lucky to hear her speak!
Books mentioned in this topic
Black Water Sister (other topics)Salvage the Bones (other topics)
Sing, Unburied, Sing (other topics)
On its surface, this is the story of a road trip by a family to pick up the father when he is released from Parchman prison and the disruption to the family this causes. In reality it is an exploration of death and the family history that imprints each successive generation. It is also a summary of contemporary american black history and racism in the deep south, one leaving the reader uncomfortable and troubled. In fact, as I read the final pages, what came to my mind and lingers there is poet Caroline Randal Williams' Op Ed in the NYTimes on June 26, 2020: You Want a Confederate Monument? My Body is a Confederate Monument. Here in this one family we see and experience Deep South Black American History from mid-20th Century to the last decade and how it left an indelible and real legacy on each successive generation, a collective memory that never gets left behind, and thus becoming a ghost story as well.
It is also a coming of age story, for both JoJo and in a way, his mother, Leonie.
It is also just beautiful writing. Somehow, really beautiful writing describing really terrible things just makes the horror of the act or incident or language that much more horrible.
BTW, I don't see this as truly fitting Magical Realism, probably because the elements everyone seems to say make it magical realism is the presence of ghosts and psychic abilities -- and maybe the climactic final scene. To me it's just weaving a ghost story and enhanced abilities into the story.
I could not give this a full 5 stars for a couple of reasons. I found some parts confusing -- each chapter is a different point of view chapter, jumping between JoJo, Leonie and one of the ghosts. As between JoJo and Leonie, there was a name confusion that confused me far too deep into this short work (222 pages) -- JoJo refers to his baby sister as Kayla, Leonie uses Michaela her full name, for example. By the end I had it sorted out but I really think the author could have set that up a bit better in the first chapter for each character. I also had trouble keeping the time periods referenced by the different character's stories in mind. Although by the end I realized this was most likely deliberate as the author was making a point about the flow of black history being an endless river flowing from generation to generation, that there is a timelessness to it all and to this family saga. I found myself working out a timeline -- (view spoiler)[ JoJo born around 2000 with most of the events happening aroudn 2013, Leonie born in the 1980s around 30 at time of story, Pop in Parchman around 1950 at age 15 when met Richie and witnessed the lynchings. Thus covers mid-20th Century, late 20th Century and early 21st Century (hide spoiler)] and it brought home just how little had actually changed (view spoiler)[ (Leonie's brother Given's murder which according to the timeline I set out occured around 1999 and was reminiscent of lynchings witnessed by Pop. (hide spoiler)].
This was the first Jesmyn Ward I have read. It won't be my last.
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