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The
Rediscovery of Such Sweet Thunder

By
Chip Fleischer
Publisher, Steerforth
Press
In April, Steerforth
Press will publish the novel Such
Sweet Thunder. Written in 1963 by an author who died in 1983, it came perilously
close to never being published, and to disappearing without a trace. Here's
how this unique publishing project came about:
Two
years ago, a writer friend of mine happened upon a used copy of an odd memoir
called The Bern Book: A Record of the Voyage of the Mind, which was
in effect about being the only black guy in Europe's most provincial capital
during the 1950s. Impressed and moved by the sensibility at work, my friend
mentioned the book to me because, like its author Vincent
O. Carter, I am from Kansas City. I quickly found a copy of my own online.
I learned from
the front matter that, though Carter completed The Bern Book in 1957,
it did not get published until 1973. The book's preface is a 1970 essay by the
expatriate American literary biographer and former Publishers Weekly
international correspondent Herbert
Lottman. In his essay, called "The Invisible Writer," Lottman heaped praise
upon an unpublished autobiographical novel Carter completed in the 1960s.
Was
Carter still alive? I wondered. He'd only have been 77. Did that book ever get
published? And, if not...might the manuscript still exist?
I faxed Lottman
in Paris, and he gave me the sad news that Carter had long since died. He told
me Carter never married and had no children, but suggested perhaps his Swiss
girlfriend had sent his papers to whatever relatives remained in Kansas City.
Herb promised to ask around, and soon the search for Carter's lost works took
on a word-of-mouth life of its own.
Four months later,
a retired professor at Penn State got from a Swiss friend in Greece the contact
information for Carter's girlfriend, who was still living in Bern. Her name
is Liselotte Haas, and, a week after I contacted her by phone, I received an
805-page, yellowed typescript that hadn't been read by a fresh pair of eyes
in more than 30 years.
Set
in Kansas City, Missouri, during the Jazz Age of the 1920s and '30s, Such
Sweet Thunder is a majestic evocation of childhood and parental love told
through the eyes of a boy, Amerigo Jones. In addition to being a Kansas Citian,
I am also the father of two young boys, and Carter's ability to recreate the
way in which a child experiences the world places his book in rare company.
In this, and some other interesting ways, I think it's fair to liken Such
Sweet Thunder to a sort of African-American Call
It Sleep.
I
could make other lofty comparisons, to the work of Joyce
or the music of Duke Ellington -- comparisons that I believe would hold up,
but with which others might take exception. Such Sweet Thunder is a book
that makes demands upon its readers, and yes, I do wish Vincent were alive for
one final round of polishing and revision. But Steerforth has left the text
alone because we can't imagine any changes that could be made without Carter's
involvement that could be considered an improvement.
I have read Such
Sweet Thunder through three times, and have no doubt that Carter consciously
selected (or at least left in) every word to serve a purpose. I also believe
the book's strengths so overwhelm its flaws as to render them relatively insignificant.
And there is one characterization with which I believe everyone who reads Such
Sweet Thunder will agree -- and that is to say it is an unrivaled firsthand
account of African-American life in pre-World War II America.
I
am heartened by the fact that all of the advance reviews have been very positive,
and that the book's publication appears on track to be the "event" I believe
it deserves to be. For a feature story that went out over the Associated Press
national wire this week, a reporter spoke to Liselotte Haas, who was just in
the United States for a long visit.
"I found in this
time in America, people are so insecure, so full of fears. I think a book that
speaks so much about love and dignity under very difficult circumstances is
needed now," Liselotte is quoted as saying. "I'm very happy for Vincent. That's
what he wanted, to touch people's hearts with all this love."
Photos of Vincent
O. Carter courtesy of Steerforth Press.
Such
Sweet Thunder
Steerforth
Press
Out
There: Mavericks of Black Literature
contains an essay about Carter's
The Bern Book
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