After
Marita Golden, . . Doubleday, $23.95 (237pp) ISBN 978-0-385-51222-0
The author of half a dozen books on race, both fiction and nonfiction, Golden tackles the subject from a different perspective in her latest novel about a black policeman who kills an innocent young black man. Thinking the driver he just pulled over is reaching for a gun, Maryland police officer Carson Blake shoots first. But what Carson thought was a gun turns out to be a cellphone. Carson; his wife, Bunny; and their three children struggle through the aftermath as Golden explores the baggage that comes with the badge for a black family man. The story has potential, but Golden's flat prose and bloodless dialogue drain it. She does offer some studied insight into a fraught dynamic, but the novel as a whole is standard and sentimental.
Reviewed on: 03/27/2006
Genre: Fiction
Other - 156 pages - 978-0-385-51702-7
Paperback - 258 pages - 978-0-7679-1778-0