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Standing at the Scratch Line

A Novel

Guy Johnson

$36.99

Paperback

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English
Villard
15 March 2001
Series: Strivers Row
Raised in the steamy bayous of New Orleans in the early 1900s, LeRoi ""King"" Tremain, caught up in his family's ongoing feud with the rival DuMont family, learns to fight. But when the teenage King mistakenly kills two white deputies during a botched raid on the DuMonts, the Tremains' fear of reprisal forces King to flee Louisiana.

King thus embarks on an adventure that first takes him to France, where he fights in World War I as a member of the segregated 369th

Battalion-in the bigoted army he finds himself locked in combat with American soldiers as well as with Germans. When he returns to America, he battles the Mob in Jazz Age Harlem, the KKK in Louisiana, and crooked politicians trying to destroy a black township in Oklahoma.

King Tremain is driven by two principal forces- He wants to be treated with respect, and he wants to create a family dynasty much like the one he left behind in Louisiana. This is a stunning debut by novelist Guy Johnson that provides a true depiction of the lives of African-Americans in the early decades of the twentieth century.
By:  
Imprint:   Villard
Country of Publication:   United States
Dimensions:   Height: 203mm,  Width: 130mm,  Spine: 31mm
Weight:   442g
ISBN:   9780375756672
ISBN 10:   0375756671
Series:   Strivers Row
Pages:   576
Publication Date:  
Audience:   General/trade ,  ELT Advanced
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active

After completing college in Ghana, Guy Johnson managed a bar on Spain's Costa del Sol, ran a photo-safari service from London through Morocco and Algeria, and worked on oil rigs in Kuwait. Most recently he worked in the local government of Oakland, California, for more than twenty years. He lives in Oakland with his wife and son. He is the son of the author Maya Angelou.

Reviews for Standing at the Scratch Line: A Novel

The adventures of an African-American man during the first half of this century provides thrills without much insight, emphasizing fists, gunplay, and the justice of the knife over introspection or the deeper working of memory. Newcomer Johnson's saga (which apparently had seen countless script versions ) begins in 1916 in the bayous of Louisiana, as young LeRoi Tremain joins his uncle in an ambush of smugglers. During the fight, a police officer is killed, and a family elder reluctantly sends LeRoi away from the family for his safety and theirs. He joins the army and earns his nickname - King for The King of Death - in France, fighting with the US Army's valiant colored units. After many astonishing feats, racial slanders, and heroic conquests, King returns to New York rich, young, and feared. Though the city is the home of the mob, King, at the height of the Jazz Age in Harlem, manages to eliminate his business competition. In 1920, he moves on to Now Orleans, where he destroys corrupt politicians and errant police officers alike. Then, after rescuing the lovely Serena from her creel father, he marries her and relocates to Bodie Wells, Oklahoma, the only colored community around here with electricity. More corruption, more racism, more Moral Janitorial work to be done. King is portrayed as a violent, magnanimous World Spirit of limitless generosity, righteous justice, rock-solid honor, and ruthless pragmatism - an African-American Chuck Norris. His enemies are weak and venal men, as are most of his women: Serena bears King's children, but does him wrong in the end. Any literary expectations raised by the fact that the author's mother is the poet Maya Angelou will go unsatisfied here. This is like a paginated movie thickened with descriptions to pad out a novel, in this case a spectacle of action-packed bloodshed. (Kirkus Reviews)


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