Milwaukee Blues bookcover

Milwaukee Blues

A Novel
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Description

The deaths of unarmed Black male citizens at the hands of police from Eric Garner's in New York City in 2014 to George Floyd's in Minneapolis in May 2020 provide the impetus behind Louis-Philippe Dalembert's latest novel, a re-imagining of events leading up to and after these tragedies.

In this moving tribute set in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, the composite, fictionalized main character Emmett and victim of police violence is seen through the eyes of several individuals who were all touched by his life: the Pakistani shopkeeper who dialed 911; Emmett’s former girlfriend; a teacher; a neighborhood friend, and his college football coach all recall Emmett and describe how his love and generous spirit touched their lives. The novel then takes a wider point of view in the second half to focus on the march and memorial service with a resounding and spiritual message of peace. This is a powerful testament to the ongoing struggles for justice, and a moving and hopeful tribute to the many victims of racist violence.

Product Details

PublisherSchaffner Press
Publish DateMay 02, 2023
Pages260
LanguageEnglish
TypeBook iconPaperback / softback
EAN/UPC9781639640096
Dimensions8.0 X 5.5 X 0.7 inches | 0.7 pounds
BISAC Categories: Popular Fiction

About the Author

Author: Louis-Philippe Dalembert is a Haitian poet and novelist who writes in both French and Creole. His works have been translated into several languages and his novel, THE MEDITERRANEAN WALL was the French Voices Grand Prize Winner for best translation in 2021. He lives both in Port-Au-Prince, Haiti, and Paris, France.

Translator: Born in Indonesia (1936), raised in The Netherlands, and residing in the USA since the age of 22, Marjolijn de Jager earned a PhD. in Romance Languages and Literatures from UNC-Chapel Hill in 1975. She translates from both the Dutch and the French. Francophone African literature, the women’s voices in particular, have a special place in her heart. Among her honors are an NEA grant, two NEH grants and, in 2011, the annually awarded ALA Distinguished Member Award received from the African Literature Association for scholarship, teaching, and translations of African Literature. She was the Grand Prize winner in 2021 of the French Voices Award from Excellence in translation for THE MEDITERRANEAN WALL by Louis-Philippe Dalembert. For further information please see http://mdejager.com

Reviews

"Echoing the murders of Eric Garner and George Floyd, this heartfelt, fluidly told account by Haitian novelist Dalembert (The Mediterranean Wall) portrays one young Black man and his fatal encounter with the police. Emmett grows up in the rough Franklin Heights neighborhood of Milwaukee, a gentle, charismatic boy with a talent for football whose story is unfolded through accounts by the people around him. Starting with the Pakistani shopkeeper now recriminating himself for having called 911 on Emmett, they include an idealistic white teacher at his grammar school; childhood friends in Franklin Heights; the Black coach at the predominantly white, Catholic university where Emmett won an athletic scholarship; Emmett’s white fianceìe, distraught when he ends their relationship as unworkable in a hostile world; and the woman he became involved with when he returned home, his NFL dreams destroyed by injury. An extended third-person account of Emmett’s funeral and an accompanying demonstration point hopefully to the dream of equality for all. What results is the poignant portrait not just of one Black man destroyed by racist violence but of an entire community struggling with its burdens.

VERDICT Inaugural recipient of an Albertine Publishers Grant and shortlisted for the U.S. Prix Goncourt, this eloquently translated work will engender conversation and engage readers of both literary and popular fiction."
—Barbara Hoffert, Library Journal


“Dalembert is a world-class poet and chronicler not only of the African diaspora but of the radical uprootedness of people everywhere. His work is the work of witness, infused with love and admiration for the millions of sufferers who endure the violent disruptions of our time with dignity and perseverance and a love for one another that is equal to his own.”
Russell Banks, author of Continental Drift, and The Sweet Hereafter

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