Agenda
- Why We're Here / Roundtable Rules
- Introduction to Literary Forensics
- Group Discussion
- Further Study
Why We're Here
We writers want to improve our craft
by reading like a writer
We learn from each other
using Literary Forensics
Roundtable Rules
Always refer back to the book
Practice active listening & serendipity
Every feeling and observation is valid...
but not every conclusion
Always refer back to the book
Reading Teaches Writing
Today's author: James McBride
- Education: B.A. from Oberlin College, Masters in journalism from Columbia University
- Professional: Formerly, reporter for The Washington Post and People magazine
Currently, Distinguished Writer-in-Residence at New York University - Author: 4 novels: Miracle at St. Anna, Song Yet Sung, The Good Lord Bird, Deacon King Kong
a short story collection: Five-Carat Soul
a memoir: The Color of Water: A Black Man's Tribute to His White Mother
a book about James Brown: Kill 'Em and Leave - Music: Jazz composer (Right to Return, Bobos) & tenor saxophonist
(Little Jimmy Scott, Rock Bottom Remainders)
"A man who does not trust cannot be trusted.”
- James McBride,
Deacon King Kong: The Country Girl
What do you feel?
What in the book elicited that feeling?
Every feeling and observation is valid...
but every conclusion should be questioned
We practice serendipity
- nothing is too crazy
Always refer back to the book
What do you notice?
"And there [the ants] stayed, a sole phenomenon in the Republic of Brooklyn, where cats hollered like people, dogs ate their own feces, aunties chain-smoked and died at age 102, a kid named Spike Lee saw God, the ghosts of the departed Dodgers soaked up all possibility of new hope, and penniless desperation ruled the life of the suckers too black or too poor to leave, while in Manhattan the buses ran on time, the lights never went out, the death of a single white child in a traffic accident was a page one story, while phony versions of black and Latino life ruled the Broadway roost, making white writers rich—West Side Story, Porgy & Bess, Purlie Victorious—and on it went, the whole business of the white man’s reality lumping together like a giant, lopsided snowball, the Great American Myth, the Big Apple, the Big Kahuna, the City That Never Sleeps, while the blacks and Latinos who cleaned the apartments and dragged out the trash and made the music and filled the jails with sorrow slept the sleep of the invisible and functioned as local color."
- James McBride, Deacon King Kong: The March of the Ants
Deacon King Kong - Stats
- Marketing: Black & African American Historical Fiction, Literary Fiction
- Genre: Realistic Historical Archplot Long-Form
- Print Pages: 384
- Word count: 121,803; Avg. wds/sent.: 10.65
- Reading Level: Grade 6; Lexical Density: 49.82
- Flesch Reading Ease: 80.31
- POV: Various (incl. ants); 3rd Person; Tense: Past
- Publish date: March 3, 2020
- Paperback release: February 2, 2021
- Publisher: Riverhead Books
- Sold By: Penguin / Random House
- Audio book narr.: Dominic Hoffman (14 hrs, 5 mins)
