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Swiss Movement

Swiss Movement

List Price: $22.99
Your Price: $22.99
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: "Superlative Chronometer"
Review: I cannot recall exactly how SWISS MOVEMENT came to appear on my inexhaustible list of books to be read. My suspicion is I discovered it during perusal of some other (but more astute) reviewer's recommendations after yet another disappointing experience with the stylings of a contemporary Black novelist. Be assured, I have commensurate misgivings with mediocre offerings from writers of all ethnicities who inexplicably manage to get book after book of barely literate drivel into publication, the point here was what precipitous event brought Vaugh A. Carney to my attention.

Among the back cover hyperbolic platitudes, John A Williams, who incidentally is another author who never received the level of acclaim warranted by his body of work, proclaims SM is "Ellisonesque," well-intentioned praise I find to be a huge boulder no Black author should be obligated, inadvertent or not, to lug up the mountainside. Carney's novel of a Harvard educated Wall Street attorney who is pointedly reminded on a daily basis that he is Black and out of his assigned element does share some thematic similarities with INVISIBLE MAN but that is where the comparisons end. Mr. Ellison was a great writer; in this first novel Carney demonstrates he is a talented one. Ellison's book is a challenge to read and interpret. Conversely, SM is easily approachable, primarily devoid of the oppressively complex grammatical structure and deeply contemplative metaphors endemic to the earlier work. That is neither denigration of Carney's style nor an inference he assaults the reader's intelligence, he simply does not attempt to cloak his ideas in literary erudition.

At it's core, this is the story of the Black man's perpetual struggle to achieve pyschological balance and socio-economic security in an often openly hostile environment. With a backdrop of jazz, Carney unfurls a story of relationships and the determinism of true love. Franklin D. Moore, the protagonist is on a journey to self-awareness bordering on existentialism that commences at age 14 in 1963 and continues to evolve *after* the book's denouement in the late 1970s. The trials, tribulations and epiphanies he encounters and experiences are equally as relevant to the Black individual of the present as they were in the 70s, 50s, 30s or 1870s. However, unlike the INVISIBLE MAN where the protagonist ends up enlightened but inextricably encumbered, Franklin Moore is cognizant of the encumbrances yet optimistically enlightened.

All in all, a book not to be overlooked.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: Brilliant, affecting and totally unforgettable
Review: I could run out of superlatives in describing this wonderful, moving book. It's the best I've read within the past few years. What an authorial vision! And when Mr. Carney cranks it up, he writes like a god. An awesome achievement.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: TOTALLY BEAUTIFUL!
Review: This brother cooks over a very high flame! A riveting, entertaining and enormously instructive tale. The protagonist is a kind of black Everyman, which makes this book resonate at all levels. Everyone to whom I've recommended Swiss Movement has loved it. Guaranteed to move you!


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