Colson Whitehead and the book ‘Harlem Shuffle’

Two-time Pulitzer Prize winner Colson Whitehead released the novel, Harlem Shuffle, in September of 2021. Offering the pretense of family life mixed with criminality in the early 1960s of New York City generally and Harlem specifically, the story of Harlem Shuffle works partly as morality play, partly as exposition on race and power, and finally as a love letter for a people the author writes as something I recognize as family.

(Colson Whitehead‘s most recent book, Harlem Shuffle, was published September 14, 2021).

Harlem Shuffle introduces us to Ray Carney, a furniture salesman selling furniture in Harlem. Carney descends from a criminal family, living in a cramped apartment with his wife Elizabeth. The couple is expecting their second child as the story begins. Ray fences stolen merchandise from his store, including merchandise acquired from his cousin Freddie.

(Harlem Shuffle is Colson Whitehead‘s most recent release).

While Ray is seeking to lead an honest business, Freddie’s path includes one of growing criminality getting more aggressive with ambition over time. Both men bring an acumen to their livelihoods, responding as they can to limited opportunity where they live with options elsewhere amounting to little. This background prefaces much of the novel’s action that follows.

(Colson Whitehead has won the Pulitzer Prize twice for fiction based partly in history).

Harlem Shuffle includes three main acts of theft that occur in 1959, 1961 and 1964, respectively. The last act occurs during the Harlem race riot of 1964, which started July 18th of that year when a white off-duty policeman shot and killed an African American teenager in the neighborhood. While the activities occurred during a period roughly 60-years ago, the resemblance to a reality of the United States if the present day is striking.

(Colson Whitehead won the Pulitzer Prize for The Underground Railroad and The Nickel Boys, the second of which Matt Lynn Digital reviewed here).

The action described prefaces the point of discussing the conflicting points of personality within Ray Carney. Is the son of a criminal trying to lead an honest life able to stand up to the increasing heat suggested by his cousin Freddie? Can Ray be the man his conscience dictates in a world aiming to seduce him to take a darker path? Do the escapades of intensifying theft with Freddie offer sufficient temptation for Freddie to make Ray cross that line? The underlying story offers entertaining fare for those not so interested in this line of questioning.

(The Underground Railroad and The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead won the Pulitzer Prize).

Consider me entertained and intellectually intrigued by Colson Whitehead‘s latest novel. I give Harlem Shuffle by Colson Whitehead 4.25-stars on a scale of 1-to-5 for its quality.

Matt – Wednesday, January 26, 2022