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New People

New People

A Novel. New York Times Notable Book 2017

von Danzy Senna

Taschenbuch
256 Seiten; 202 mm x 132 mm
Sprache English
2018 Penguin US
ISBN 978-0-399-57314-9

Besprechung

Named A 2017 BEST SUMMER READ BY:

Vogue Elle Esquire Harper's Bazaar Glamour
Buzzfeed In Style Men's Journal Bustle Ms. Magazine Pop Sugar Newsday The Millions Time Out Bitch CNN's The Lead The Fader

"[Senna] explore[s] what happens when races and cultures mingle in the home and under the skin...Her new novel, the sinister and charming New People, riffs on the themes she s made her own with a twist. It s a novel that reads us. It anticipates, and sidesteps, lazy reading and sentimental expectations The material is hot but the style stays cool Senna s aim is precise and devastating There is no easy consolation in New People. But in its insistence on being read on its own terms, its commitment to complexity, it does something better than describe freedom. It enacts it. New York Times

"[A] cutting take on race and class part dark comedy, part surreal morality tale. Disturbing and delicious. People

An of-the-moment novel [that] tackles identity and infatuation slender but powerful, as seductive and urgent as a phone call from an old flame. At first blush, the book seems like a straightforward love story but it s more complicated than that This is not a book about race disguised as a romance, nor is it a love story saddled with a moral. Senna s achievement is that she interlaces both threads in one ingenious tale. O, the Oprah Magazine 

"You ll gulp Senna s novel in a single sitting but then mull over it for days. Entertainment Weekly

Slick and highly enjoyable Thrillingly, blackness is not hallowed in Senna s work, nor is it impervious to pathologies of ego. Senna particularly enjoys lampooning the search for racial authenticity...Identity, far from being a point of solidarity, is a beckoning void, and adroit comedy quickly liquefies into absurd horror. New Yorker

Danzy Senna delivers her finest and funniest work yet [she] writes with a dexterous command of character and language. And she unleashes a razor-sharp sense of humor that take aim at and slices through notions of political correctness, identity politics and hypocrisy achingly funny...and deeply affecting." Essence

A darkly comic novel about race, about false utopias, and about the fine line between seemingly innocuous, everyday groupthink the kind that s the price of admission for being part of a marriage, or a band of friends, or a tribe of any sort.... Senna writes beautifully about the complexity of identity, the intersection of racial consciousness, and class awareness, and individual perspective. . . Everyone should read it. Vogue

Senna s thriller-like novel is a stirring exploration of race and identity, and, a propulsive look at a fantasy playing out before one s eyes. Esquire

Compulsively readable. Buzzfeed Books
 
It says a great deal for New People Danzy Senna s martini-dry, espresso-dark comedy of contemporary manners that its compound of caustic observations and shrewd characterizations could only have emerged from a writer as finely tuned to her social milieu as [Jane] Austen was to hers artfully strewn with excruciating and uproarious misperceptions [New People] doesn t pour cold water on one s expectations for a better, more tolerant world. In fact, it implies that world has, to a great extent, already arrived. Newsday

Set in the Rodney King-era 90s, New People is as mesmerizingly fast-paced as it is deeply reflective of monumental truths that resonate perhaps even more powerfully two decades in the future. Harper s Bazaar 

The thorniness of desire is inextricably intertwined here with the fraught history of race in America, and, as in Senna s previous work, she aims to satirize characterizations of racial identity at every turn Maria s deliberate refusal to embrace a more hopeful future keeps eating away at her, leaving her in a potentially ruinous fix by the end of her unresolved story. And yet that refusal and this novel is also an antidote to the attempt to dismiss continuing racial inequalities within a narrative of progress. Yes, right now, it s knotty, and uncomfortable, and depressing. And we must not look away. San Francisco Chronicle

A darkly comic psychological thriller Senna s antiheroine is winningly vulnerable... and New People is at its best when it delves into the worlds of Maria s construction, or reconstruction [she] wanders the city in a daze, ricocheting from bad decision to bad decision, barely dreaming at all. Her life seems like it will never make room for the answers she seeks, and Senna enjoys every second she takes to make that clear. Village Voice

A provocative conversation starter...with bite and brains invigorating. Paste Magazine

Sharp. Boston Globe

"The frankness with which New People treats race as a kind of public performance is both uncomfortable and strangely cathartic. ... Provocative." Wall Street Journal

Agile and ambitious... a wild-hearted romance about secrets and obsessions, a dramedy of manners about educated middle-class blacks the talented tenth that is Senna s authorial home ground. Elle

A paean to the psychosocial complexities of being racially mixed The novel s ultimate message seems...to be one both true and unsettling, if unsurprising: that color-lines have never left America and likely never will. Los Angeles Review of Books

Oooooo, this book! Senna has created an engrossing story of race and class in contemporary America It s fantastic! You can practically hear it sizzle in your hands. BookRiot

A thoughtful, earnest, witty discussion on race. Marie Claire

A brilliant, thoughtful treatise on race and identity in the 21st century. Pop Sugar

[A] taut novel about a couple grappling with guilt, race, and desire in the late 90s. Esquire

Compellingly provocative [Senna] creat[es] a dense psychological portrait of a black woman nearing the close of the 20th century: inquisitive, obsessive, imaginative, alive." New Republic

Senna s meditation on 1996 America and its false sense of progress is an eerie picture of society today, too. With a dark sense of humor, Senna builds her story with a horror-like tension that releases with a tongue-in-cheek sigh. Sure to keep readers riding white-knuckled to the end. Booklist

Danzy Senna s latest stunner of a novel is both political and bingeable, worthy of a one-sitting read   Vulture

Provocative Expertly plotted and full of dark humor, New People is a thoughtful and unforgettable look at race and class at the dawn of the 21st century. BookPage

Danzy Senna s latest novel is the best of her writing. It s rich, nuanced, and in some respects, scary. The question at its core is: What happens when your perfect life isn t enough? Bitch

A striking, off-kilter exploration of race and class. Huffington Post

[New People] will catch readers off guard with its plot twists and almost too-relatable characters. Senna uses light humor to balance disturbing events that present Maria with more than a few reality checks. Ms. Magazine

New People will challenge your assumptions about how you define yourself and others.
HelloGiggles

An achievement in so many ways. It succeeds, to begin with, in capturing the psyche of a woman worn down by expectation. It also convincingly distills the essence of an intentional community in bohemian black Brooklyn. And it manages to send up the literary tropes of biracial representation, in particular that of the tragic mulatto, a mixed-race person who s traumatized by their inability to fit neatly into distinct racial categories and their attendant social schema. Senna plugs that legendary trope into the classic humor machine. With New People, Senna appears to have written the book she was waiting for. The Baffler

An absolutely brilliant darkly comic wild ride of a novel it s completely fearless and subversive while at the same time incredibly honest and accurate in how it approaches race and class. Porochista Khakpour, LitHub

A darkly comic page-turner. Los Angeles Daily News

A lively, biting novel about the heavy burdens of racial self-consciousness and the perils of an identity forged by the assumptions of others. 1843 Magazine

"Senna s latest novel, New People, occupies the uneasy space between horror and humor.
Vineyard Gazette

One of the very most interesting social writers the 21st century has yet to produce...Senna explodes American conceptions of class and race in ways that will make readers completely uncomfortable. Seattle Weekly

"A great read, both compelling and thoughtful. The narrative has a page-turning urgency, as Maria tumbles toward a disaster of her own making. Library Journal (starred)

Senna's fearless novel is equal parts beguiling and disturbing [she] combines the clued-in status details you'd find in a New York magazine article with the narrative invention of big-league fiction . Every detail and subplot is resonant. A great book about race and a great book all around. Kirkus Reviews (starred)

Remarkable. New People plays out like Greek tragedy and social comedy all at once, reminding you that the worst kind of hell is always the one we raise. Marlon James, author of A Brief History of Seven Killings

New People
sparkles with precision, and with antic and merciless hilarity. I was seduced into reading it in one sitting, but will be thinking about it for a long time to come. This book utterly grave, and yet beautifully light-hearted--is a wonder. 
Rachel Kushner, author of The Flame Throwers

"I stayed up way later than planned to finish New People, Danzy Senna s riveting, take-no-prisoners, dystopic dream of a novel. More scorcher than satire, New People loads identity, race, despair, and desire into a blender then hits high. Get ready to stay up late, to be propelled, pricked, and haunted." 
Maggie Nelson, author of The Argonauts

"Danzy Senna detonates the bomb between respectability and desire. In hypnotizing prose, New People kicks you in the gut, then sings you a lullaby. Read this and be haunted. Senna is a master."
Mat Johnson, author of Loving Day

Kurztext / Annotation

Maria and Khalil, college sweethearts, are planning a wedding. They are the perfect couple, "King and Queen of the Racially Nebulous Prom." Everything Maria knows she should want lies before her - yet she can't stop daydreaming about another man. As fantasy escalates to fixation, it dredges up secrets from the past and threatens to unravel not only Maria's perfect new life but her very persona.

Langtext

Named a BEST BOOK OF THE YEAR BY THE NEW YORK TIMES BOOK REVIEW, VOGUE, TIME MAGAZINE, NPR and THE ROOT

"[A] cutting take on race and class...part dark comedy, part surreal morality tale. Disturbing and delicious." People

"You ll gulp Senna s novel in a single sitting but then mull over it for days. Entertainment Weekly


From the bestselling author of Caucasia and Colored Television, a subversive and engrossing novel of race, class and manners in contemporary America.

As the twentieth century draws to a close, Maria is at the start of a life she never thought possible. She and Khalil, her college sweetheart, are planning their wedding. They are the perfect couple, "King and Queen of the Racially Nebulous Prom." Their skin is the same shade of beige. They live together in a black bohemian enclave in Brooklyn, where Khalil is riding the wave of the first dot-com boom and Maria is plugging away at her dissertation, on the Jonestown massacre. They've even landed a starring role in a documentary about "new people" like them, who are blurring the old boundaries as a brave new era dawns. Everything Maria knows she should want lies before her yet she can't stop daydreaming about another man, a poet she barely knows. As fantasy escalates to fixation, it dredges up secrets from the past and threatens to unravel not only Maria's perfect new life but her very persona.

Heartbreaking and darkly comic, New People is a bold and unfettered page-turner that challenges our every assumption about how we define one another, and ourselves.

Textauszug

S he wasn't expecting to see him here tonight. Now, her face feels warm as she watches him step onto the stage and pick up the microphone. He stands like a teenager, slouched and ambivalent, hands shoved in his pockets, as if he's been forced to appear, forced to read his poetry before strangers. Maria first met him several months ago-and now, it seems, he is everywhere she looks. Or maybe she is everywhere he looks. Just last week she ran into him at a restaurant. He was there-sitting at the bar alone, drinking a beer-when she arrived to meet a friend. She stopped to say hello and he said a polite hello back, frowning as if he couldn't remember her name. Afterward, she sat only half listening to her friend rattle on about work, conscious with every breath of his form at the bar. In the audience, listening to his voice, she realizes that she has been waiting to see him again. She feels uneasy with this aware-ness. She keeps her eyes fixed on his sneakers, which are dirty and giant. It is too much to look at his face. Her fiancé, Khalil, sits beside her. Khalil's sister, Lisa, sits on the other side. They flank her. The audience around her, who moments before were laughing and hooting at the last performer, a girl who swung her long hair from side to side, seems to have gone unusually still, alert, as if at the precipice of some new awareness. Khalil places a hand on Maria's knee and leans in and whispers, This guy's pretty good. She nods, glancing away from the stage toward the back of the club. It is raining outside. Maria thinks she should tell Khalil she feels sick and wants to go home-because in a way, this is true. But she doesn't. She stays seated, her face turned away toward the exit, and when it's all over, she follows Khalil and Lisa to the front of the club; they both want to say hello. She hangs back, ­listening to them speak. Lisa is saying something about a line she likes from his penultimate poem. That's the word she uses. Penultimate. Khalil is smiling, nodding in agreement. The poet looks embarrassed by their praise. He keeps scratching his arm as he stares at the floor. Maria hovers in the background, her fists clenched in her pock-ets. The poet's eyes discover her. You good? he says. She nods, chokes out the lie: I'm good. In her dream that night she is sitting on a blue velvet sofa, reading the pages of a friend's novel. She realizes in the dream that it is a perfect story she is reading. She is miserable that she did not write it. She knows she will never write a book like this. She will never write a work of fiction. She is a scholar; she only works with given materials. She wakes up hot with envy. She has to remind herself that the novel doesn't exist outside of her dream, nor does the friend who wrote it. Khalil is asleep beside her. There is a ticking sound coming from the kitchen. Maria closes her eyes, thinking of the poet. She remembers his face and the way he stood half-turned away from the audience. She remembers, with photographic clarity, the slope of his forehead and the small scar cutting through his eyebrow. Warmth and a kind of preemptive grief move through her body. Khalil looks politely bored in his sleep, as if he's listening to somebody recounting a dream. Maria is twenty-seven. She is engaged to marry Khalil, who loves her unequivocally. She is the one he has been waiting for his whole life. Maria loves Khalil. She never doubts this. He is the one she needs, the one who can repair her. They met in college on the other coast years ago, so they have, in a sense, grown up together. It is sometimes hard for Maria to see where one of them ends and the other begins. Their favorite song is Al Green's "Simply Beautiful." Their favorite movies are Sammy and Rosie Get Laid, Chameleon Street, and Nothin' But a Man. Their favorite novel is Giovanni's Room. Khalil says they make each other complete. Their skin is the same shade of beige. Together, they look like the end of a story. They li

Biografische Anmerkung zu den Verfassern

Danzy Senna is the author of five previous books, including the bestselling Caucasia and, most recently, New People. The recipient of numerous awards and honors, she teaches writing at the University of Southern California.