Based upon an actual reform school in mid-twentieth century Florida, the Nickel Academy is the setting of Colson Whitehead's horrifying tale of racial injustice and abuse which represents nothing less than the American counterpart to the Siberian gulags denounced by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in his own writings. The reader is quickly plunged into Elwood Curtis' Kafkaesque nightmare springing from his arrest on totally spurious grounds. But beware : Whitehead does not cede to facile fantasies of black rage, for Elwood's unsinkable idealism is based upon Reverend King's calls for loving one's enemies.
This
moral paradox is a dual-edged sword of uncertain worth, lest one forget King's vision of the long arc of history, no matter how Elwood's companion in suffering Turner feels about the legitimacy of loving one's enemies to death. Haunting and thought-provoking, a future classic.
Ride that Trojan horse !
Based upon an actual reform school in mid-twentieth century Florida, the Nickel Academy is the setting of Colson Whitehead's horrifying tale of racial injustice and abuse which represents nothing less than the American counterpart to the Siberian gulags denounced by Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn in his own writings. The reader is quickly plunged into Elwood Curtis' Kafkaesque nightmare springing from his arrest on totally spurious grounds. But beware : Whitehead does not cede to facile fantasies of black rage, for Elwood's unsinkable idealism is based upon Reverend King's calls for loving one's enemies.
This moral paradox is a dual-edged sword of uncertain worth, lest one forget King's vision of the long arc of history, no matter how Elwood's companion in suffering Turner feels about the legitimacy of loving one's enemies to death. Haunting and thought-provoking, a future classic.