The narrator, a Black oil refinery worker in Louisiana, looks back on his life and the people and events that have shaped it. This description may be from another edition of this product.
Louis Edwards coming out party into the literary world was a success. The work had a great resemblance to Richard Wright's earlier novel Rites of Passage. He took on a great challenge in his book. Edwards spoke of the forgotten average black male. He is a part of a new generation of writers who are finally embracing this group of black males. He filled in the gap between the Protaganist in the book Invisible Man and Bigger Thomas in Native Son. The best story in the book was the conversation between Eddie and his wife in the kitchen. I loved the way he gave the reader both voices of the story in a non-chronological way. The way he described the different points of view was breath-taking. Eddie was trying to put his mark on his women, while his "woman" viewed the act as second degree masturbation. This concept was seen in both of the previously spoken of books, but Edwards put this relationship in the concept of marriage where the average black man currently abides. This book's longevity is only in the hands of Edwards if he can come back with a more insightful work. All in all a great book.
nice read
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
i enjoyed, this book on what was going through the main characther's Eddie's mind, the only problem i had with the book was that, it seemed to have been written in short story form, leaving a lot of thing's unclear.
Short but deep
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 24 years ago
Don't be fooled. A short book doesn't mean a lack of information between the covers. The author gives us an excellent treatment of ten seconds of thought about periods in the main characters life. This was selected by my book club, and I was reluctant at first, then pleasantly surprised. Well done!
A Joycean discourse on the tribulations of Black America.
Published by Thriftbooks.com User , 26 years ago
Louis Edwards, in the esteemed tradition of Joyce, Wolff and John Edgar Wideman, delivers a tour de force in his first novel "Ten Seconds". With remarkably swift yet extremely provocative prose, Edwards recounts the life of a young African-American man attempting to ground his identity in the south. Using a Joycean technique, in terms of the cyclical structure of the novel (based on ten seconds of a 100 meter race), Edwards captivates the reader from page one. Once you pick this, you will not put it down until it is over. Wonderful!
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