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Paperback Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone Book

ISBN: 0375701893

ISBN13: 9780375701894

Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

A major work of American literature that powerfully portrays the anguish of being Black in a society that at times seems poised on the brink of total racial war.

At the height of his theatrical career, the actor Leo Proudhammer is nearly felled by a heart attack. As he hovers between life and death, Baldwin shows the choices that have made him enviably famous and terrifyingly vulnerable.

For between Leo's childhood on the streets...

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

"Only someone who no longer had any sense of what constituted happiness...

... could ever have confounded happiness with this rage. Yet, the scene we entered had been tirelessly reproduced, in stale and meticulous, absolutely libelous detail, in countless musical comedies and innumerable pork-chop-in-the-sky films: the nigger, moving in uncanny time to the music, hips, hands, and feet working, all flashing teeth and eyes, without a care in the world." Yes, the rage is still there, captured so authentically by Baldwin, the spokesman for those marginalized by the larger white, heterosexual society. The stereotype that was promoted, as indicated in the above paragraph, for so many years, of the "happy darkie," has disappeared from mainstream American society, in the course of some 50 years. I first read Baldwin over 40 years ago, starting with "Another Country," then going on to "Go Tell It on The Mountain" and "The Fire Next Time." Some of the other reviewers did not believe this book was of the same caliber as the others. I demur. The anger and anguish of the dispossessed leaps out, as in the other novels, but with each there are different facets, which make Baldwin so much more than a "one novel" author. The book starts with the heart attack of a (very!) youthful and successful black American actor, Leo Proudhammer, at the age of 39. In short order, it is apparent that his lover is a white woman, Barbara, in an age when this was still somewhat "edgy." Through flashbacks Baldwin describes an upbringing in Harlem, with the poverty, and the "emasculation" of a father who cannot provide for his family, and the loss of his older brother Caleb to jail as he associated with "the wrong crowd." The white police make more than just a cameo appearance, always a looming and threatening presence. And there is the detailing of another "edgy" crowd, the theater people, where "mixed" liaisons are largely acceptable, even the homosexual ones with "Black Christopher." Baldwin also transcends the issues related to "America's dilemma," to use Gunner Myrdal's phrase, and addresses those of the human condition. Consider insights into the medical profession with: "Hi, there, sleepy-head!" she cried cheerfully--with that really unnerving cheerfulness of nurses; one dare not speculate on what awful knowledge the cheerfulness hides-- (p66) or of fame: "People who achieve any eminence whatever are driven to do so; and there is always something terribly vulnerable about such people. They very soon discover that their eminence makes of them an incitement and a target--it does not cause them to be loved. They are trapped on their hill. They cannot come down." (p 444) And then there is the possibly extremely prophetic: "We were the only colored people there. I had worked in the kitchen, not a hundred years ago; outside were the millions of starving--Chinese"....." This groaning board was a heavy weight on the backs of many millions, whose groaning was not heard. Beneath this table, deep in the bowels of the earth, as far away as China... an en

James Baldwin's overlooked masterpiece about a man's juggling identities

If Giovanni's Room is an unresolved love story between two men, Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone puts its protagonist in the center of social spotlight where ideals of ethnics, politics, and sex force him to put on a mask. Leo Proudhammer, a 39-years-old black man, suffers from a heart attack at the height of his theatrical career, forcing him to abort all ongoing performance and rehearsal. As he hovers between life and death, James Baldwin delineates a tapestry of human life that is terrifyingly vulnerable - through the meticulous choices that have rendered him enviously famous in theater, through the racial and gay covering that have split him into multiple identities. There exists something edgy and cruel about a childhood riddled with braving the Harlem streets. Proudhammer often found him in the spotlight of eyes: eyes of children who outjocked him, eyes of the white cops toward whom he felt a rush of murderous hatred, and the tell-tale eyes of the older folks who suspected of his sexuality. The prose sustains a tincture of anguish, a tinge of paranoid, of being black in a society that at times seems poised on the brink of unstoppable racial war owing the ludicrous demands to cover stereotype associated with both race and sexuality. The theatrical industry which Proudhammer desires throws him further in disguises. Ironically it is through the many disguises he wears that he comes to term with his means. Instead of fleeing from the truth, he is approaching the reality. Disguises in a sense help make the truth a quantity with which he can live. In the juggling selves, Proudhammer retains loyalty to a white woman and a young black man. At first he might be most intimidated by his color for he does not appear to know that he is colored. He is met with people's baleful exasperation as if he is possessed by some evil spirit. Then he begins to be intimidated (and confronted), far more grievously, by the fact of his sexuality. He is gripped with the realization that he has never, in the sexual context, arrived at an understanding of being bisexual or gay. Written during a time in which racism and assimilation to white norms are horrifyingly rife, Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone brings to vivid view a man struggling to become himself through identities of a black man, a bisexual man, and an artist. Various occasions demand him to cover one of more of these identities in order to fit in. The novel pieces together moments of a man's life that teach one the price of human connection. Trapped in the wrong time, at the wrong place, and with the wrong ambitions trapped in the wrong skin, Proudhammer's perseverance earns him a reward that redeems and justifies all that pain, stigma, and bewilderment he once experienced.

Another masterpiece!

This is another of James Baldwin's literary triumphs. Here he weaves the deepest hopes, sorrows, fears and desires of the human condition into an unforgettable tapestry. The story centers around an actor named Leo Proudhammer and the choices he made in his life, the results that followed and the people he shared his life with. Here we read about Leo as a youngster growing up in Harlem, his struggles as a young man trying to break into showbiz amidst a multitude of obstacles and his successful rise to stardom. This is a very poignant and tender but, powerful and gripping story that will hold your attention. Also recommended: "Giovanni's Room", "Another Country" and "Going to Meet the Man".

Among Baldwin's most magnificent fiction

Does it sound trite in cold print to say that a book changed your life? In college in the 1970s, a friend suggested this novel to me, and it was my first exposure to James Baldwin. For the first time in my life, I felt I was reading about *me*. Baldwin's gift in writing about how people try to find dignity and self-worth in a world not of their own choosing is breathtaking and heartfelt. Anyone who has ever felt like an outsider will feel great empathy with Baldwin's work. In Tell Me How Long the Train's Been Gone, Baldwin focuses on the shifting relationships between a small group of people trying to work out who they are and how they can be true to themselves in an environment that's often uncaring. Over and over I was struck by the amount of raw experience Baldwin poured onto each page, and the amount of pain that must have been behind each sentence. As the years have gone by, I've also found that you can reread Baldwin at different stages of your life and see something different each time.Baldwin may be better known for his essays than his fiction, but I've always found his fiction more powerful. This novel, and Just Above My Head, are two of the most beautiful works I've ever read.
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