The Queen of Harlem
A Novel
by Brian Keith Jackson
List Price: $22.95
Pages: 272
Format: Hardcover
ISBN: 0385502958
Publisher: Doubleday
An African American Breakfast at Tiffanys, Brian Keith Jacksons evocative new novel introduces 120th Streets own Holly Golightly: a champagne-sipping, jet-setting social diva named Carmen England. Shes not what Southerner Mason Randolph had envisioned when he trekked up to Harlem looking for an authentic black experience, but after just a few hours in her townhouse he finds himself under her wing, under her spell, and questioning all hes ever believed about his place in the world.
Probing issues of race and identity through seductive storytelling and a keen wit, Brian Keith Jackson follows Mason as he sheds his preppie persona and emerges as Malik, complete with a new vocabulary and a baggy wardrobe--his answer to taunts that he has spent his life as a black boy blending. When he interviews to rent a room from Carmen, Mason realizes that masquerading as Malik will also win her sympathy, so he sets out to hide the details of his real roots (including his fathers gold card and a promising future at law school). Things get even trickier when Mason meets his dream date, Columbia student Kyra, who brings his identity crisis full circle. Along the way, Mason savors the city against a sparkling backdrop of historic hot spots, Dinah Washington albums, and of course a pearl-ribboned package or two from Tiffanys.
For anyone who has ever felt caught between two worlds, or anyone who simply enjoys a fresh and satisfying storyline, The Queen of Harlem is fertile ground for conversation. The questions that follow are designed to enhance your discussion and personal reading of The Queen of Harlem. We hope they will also lead you to further topics of inquiry about this rich tale and its vibrant locale.
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1. Jackson opens his novel with a quote from Nelson Mandela: We ask ourselves, Who am I to be brilliant, gorgeous, talented, and fabulous? Actually, who are you not to be? In what ways does Mason fear his talent and economic power? What does the final chapter tell us about Carmens true fears?
2. How does the evolution of Harlem reflect the lives of its residents? What does the opening scene convey about Harlems second Renaissance, especially compared to its first one in the early twentieth century?
3. What is the symbolic role of Jim, Masons dread-headed white buddy from college? Besides being the character who knows the truth about Mason, what does Jims presence say about authenticity in general, particularly among whites who appropriate aspects of black culture? How does Malcolms role compare with Jims?
4. When Mason steps off the number six train and receives his stinging introduction to Harlem from the real Malik, what keeps Mason from heading back downtown? What drives him to stay and invent a ghettonian version of himself?
5. How is Mason transformed by his mugging? What kind of turning point occurs during that scene, particularly when he orders his mugger to listen to the stolen CD?
6. Mason receives a lot of mothering. Compare the mothering styles of Joyce and Carmen. How do those two differ from Granny and her generation?
7. How is Masons attraction to Carmen different from his attraction to Kyra? What do both women teach Mason about keeping it real? Why is Kyra able to navigate the fine line between privilege and greed so successfully?
8. Though the chasm between rich and poor is a universal source of friction, why is this friction sometimes particularly intense in black America? Why is the real Malik so personally offended by Masons clean-cut appearance? What does Jackson tell us about the way wealth and destitution coexist in Harlem today?
9. As part of his disguise, Mason has to learn a new dialect. What does his new speech style suggest about the urge to shun the language of your oppressors? What are some of the empowering characteristics of Masons new way of communicating? How does he feel about his old mannerisms when he has to make small talk with Kyras parents?
10. New York is often thought of as a city where its possible to reinvent yourself an unlimited number of times. As Mason travels among several neighborhoods, and particularly when he is forced to walk a hundred blocks to get home, what does he observe about the many identities of New York itself?
11. What does Masons mother reveal to him at The Four Seasons? Does her arrival provide him with an even bigger dose of reality than Harlem?
12. As much as Carmen wanted to be the Queen of Harlem, didnt Mason equally enjoy playing the part of her courtesan? What does the final chapter say about the imaginary quality of all self-perception?
13. In her farewell note to Mason, Carmen says, Sometimes freedom is slavery in disguise. When has that phrase proven true in your life? What has enslaved Mason and Carmen throughout the novel?
14. Discuss some of the ways in which Masons Harlem experience plays out in your town or neighborhood. When have you felt compelled to hide behind a false self? What are some of the daydreams that keep you going?
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People compared Brian Keith Jackson's remarkable first novel, The View from Here, to the works of Alice Walker and Toni Morrison.
"an extraordinary debut...[by] a formidable craftsman and exceptionally gifted storyteller." A novel rich in humor and insight, The Queen of Harlem will earn Jackson a muchdeserved place in the center of todays literary landscape.
Publishers Weekly
"Once again Jackson displays his keen ability to depart from the predictable and to draw the kind of fascinating, original characters you'd love to invite to your next party."
A' Lelia Bundles, author of On Her Own: The Life and Times of Madame C. J. Walker
"An intriguing and well-written look at the nature of identity, whatever the color."
Kirkus Reviews