Devil Is Fine
John Vercher. Celadon, $28.99 (272p) ISBN 978-1-250-89448-9
In the wrenching latest from Vercher (After the Lights Go Out), a struggling biracial writer reckons with his painful family history. The unnamed novelist addresses his narration to his late 17-year-old son, Malcolm (the cause of Malcolm’s unexpected death isn’t revealed until later), as he grapples with his bitterness toward the publishing industry and his white grandfather, who lives in a nursing home and is estranged from the narrator because of “some racial stuff.” After Malcolm’s funeral, the narrator receives a letter from his grandfather’s attorney, explaining that his grandfather had given Malcolm a mid-Atlantic oceanfront estate, and that it would now transfer to him. After human skeletons are discovered on the property, he learns it was once a slave plantation and has been passed down through the generations of his white ancestors. While visiting the property, he has vivid visions of an ancestor brutalizing enslaved people in the name of saving their souls. The boy heretic in his visions refuses to submit, saying, “Better to reign than serve.” In a beautiful and weighty turn, these nightmarish scenes help the narrator to better understand Malcolm’s rejection of the Christian faith his father attempted to instill in him. Readers won’t be able to look away. Agent: David Hale Smith, InkWell Management. (June)
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Reviewed on: 03/29/2024
Genre: Fiction