Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts
Showing posts with label racism. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Review: King of Ashes: A Novel by S. A. Cosby

 

A frequent theme of S. A. Cosby’s work, beyond racism, is the idea of a family haunted by a horrible tragic legacy. A legacy that goes back decades and is once again brought to light, eventually, in the here and now, by a massive triggering event. Such is the case in the latest book, King of Ashes: A Novel.

 

Roman Carruthers runs a wealth management firm in Atlanta. His clients, rappers, and others, sometimes need creative accounting. Sometimes they need a problem fixed and Roman turns those situations over to Khali. Not only is a friend from way back, the man has skills, and has put them to use in a variety of ways for various clients of the company, Carruthers and Associates. Roman has some of the best people in the business and that is a good thing because, as the novel begins, he has to go home to Virginia as his dad is in the hospital and in a coma.

 

It doesn’t play to be in a car hit by a freight train. He was and he may not survive. The Carruthers family is a legend in Jefferson Run, Virginia. Part of that is the fact that his parents, built from the ground up, a crematorium business that has been used for decades by families from miles around. While that is very positive, the other part of the legend is that after their mom vanished without a trace a number of years ago, quite a few folks became convinced that their father killed their mom and burned up the body and all the evidence.

 

For Roman, Neveah, and Dante, that disappearance and resulting speculation has haunted them nearly their entire lives. They were kids when it happened and their childhoods ended the day she vanished.

 

Roman, the oldest, eventually went on to college and has a well-paying life down in Atlanta. Neveah stepped into their mom’s shoes and took over taking care of dad and keeping the business going. The youngest, Dante, is circling deeper and deeper in a pit of alcohol, drugs, and other vices. The family, what is left of it, is a shell of what it was and rotting from within.

 

Now their father, the possible murderer of their mom, and the man known to all as the “King of Ashes” lies in a coma. From what Naveah says, somebody might have tried to kill him. If so, it would be the latest in a string of events that have happened in recent weeks. Naveah didn’t bother to tell him as Roman was in Atlanta and hasn’t been home to help in years. Now he is and he plans on digging into what happened.

 

What follows is a complicated and often violent crime fiction read as Roman tries to save his family from the situation and their own self-destructive impulses. He has those same impulses in his own way as well as he tries to right wrongs and come to terms with a horrible and tragic family legacy.

 

There is a lot going on via multiple levels as one would expect from this talented author. I’m certainly not going to disrespect the author or the work by revealing any more of the story or the themes in the work. Certainly not a read for the squeamish as violence abounds, this is a work that will linger in the mind long after the read is finished.

 

Amazon Associate Purchase Link: https://amzn.to/4ljBI0P

 

As expected, the publisher, Flatiron Books, totally ignored my multi month request on NetGalley, so I had to wait for the Dallas Public Library System to get it in. The digital version arrived first, via Libby/Overdrive, ending the need for the print version that is just now arriving in the system.


Kevin R. Tipple ©2025

Thursday, February 24, 2022

Review: A Kind And Savage Place by Richard Helms


The new book by author Richard Helms, A Kind And Savage Place is a prequel to Six Mile Creek and others that are part of the Judd Wheeler series. While Judd plays a role in this book that runs from 1942 to 1989, he is not the central character.

Instead, this is a book about how daily interactions, even minor ones, have a major impact. Each contact has a reverberation to it for all involved. Then there are the reverberations of childhood and the random role of dice regarding who are parents are as we enter the world. That childhood, and the families we come from and their legacy, for good or ill, reverberates throughout our lives. Even death, at a young age or after a full life have a reverberation through others on and on. People talk about the fall of a single domino and how that changes everything. They miss all the dominoes that lead up to that single domino being in a certain place at a certain time and thus there to fall.  

That idea, all the dominoes that must fall to cause the certain domino to fall in a major way—seen by some and unseen by many others—is the heart of this complex tale that spans generations, families, and decades. While a central act plays a major role and triggers all sorts of events across decades, many minor daily interactions played a role for that event to happen. Life is complex as author Rick Helms beautifully illustrates in A Kind and Savage Place as he illustrates through a number of characters in this complex tale.

One of those daily interactions that was unremarkable at the time and yet put many things into motion was when Arlo Pyle hired Everett Howard to work in his auto shop. Pyle, a while man who had been to Europe and fought the Nazis before coming back home, hired Everett Howard to work in his shop and run errands. Howard was black, a young kid, and had dropped out of the segregated school, which wasn’t much to begin with, as was common at the time in North Carolina and elsewhere. It didn’t help Howard’s educational prospects that he was also a bit slow. He soon proved to Pyle that he was a hard worker.

Despite doing everything he knew to do and doing a job well, that did not stop others from accusing him of misdeeds. The fact that Howard had not done any of things he was accused of never mattered to those who could not see beyond the color of his skin.

An inability to see others as they truly are also played a major role in life as Rennie Poole was able to parlay a humble start as a local businessman, into a political force. Some folks saw him for what he was at the start and avoided him. Many others did not and became part of his world to manipulate. Long before his political career and the creation of his political machine, one of his projects was a local dancehall where teens hung out.

It was there, on a warm Saturday night in May 1954, Coral Pyle, one of four daughters of Arlo Pyle, and Adele Pyle, met Jude Pressley. A recent graduate and QB of ­considerable talent at the local level, Pressley is currently drifting through life and enjoying the adoration as a county football champion who set more than a dozen records. He also has good looks and has certainly caught the attention of Coral Pyle. That meeting in the dance hall put into motion a series of events that changed their lives forever while also directly and indirectly impacting nearly every character in this wide ranging and complicated book.

Set against the social movements of the various decades with themes of politics, greed, racism, and more, author Rick Helms tells a complicated and engrossing tale. Far more is at work beyond the brief premise. To explain more would create spoilers as things and people are tightly interlocked in this wide ranging and complex read.

Life, death, drama, and a lot more, are at work in A Kind and Savage Place by Rick Helms.

Strongly recommended. 


 

My reading copy was an ARC provided by the author with no expectation of a review.

 

Kevin R. Tipple ©2022

Saturday, September 12, 2020

Scott's Take: Superman Smashes The Klan by Gene Luen Yang


Superman Smashes The Klan by Gene Luen Yang is inspired the 1940s Superman radio serial titled “Clan of the Fiery Cross.” This original tale has Superman going up against Nazis and the Klu Klux Klan to protect a Chinese family in 1946. Superman also must face his own past and the secrets of his heritage that he has denied after exposure to a strange green rock unlocks memories he has buried in his mind and weakens him physically. Alongside Roberto and Tommy Lee, the two children of the Chinese family he is trying to help, Superman fights against racism and adversity in this original tale.


The story alternates between 1946 and earlier in Superman’s life. This story takes place from multiple perspectives including the kids. The original characters created in this novel are fairly interesting as is the artwork by Gurihiru.


Because of the subject matter in Superman Smashes The Clan, there is frequent use of racially charged language, derogatory terms, and violence. Various Chinese and African American characters must face racism in different ways at various points. At one point, there is conflict between one of the characters and a racist police officer that comes very close to current events and that may make some readers very uncomfortable. Also, in a book that is marketed to middle school readers and upwards, there is an implied murder and clearly several attempted murders.


The read is a powerful and interesting tale about fighting racism and trying to find your place in society.  The immigrant from outer space (Superman) faces various challenges throughout the novel while frequently screaming “Great Scott” alongside incredibly artwork. I like how the writer knows his Superman history and does a good job of exploring his original origin story. The book also includes essay from the writer about Superman in terms of history and race that includes a detailed analysis of the fact that Superman’s original creators were Jewish and intended Superman to represent immigrants, especially Jewish ones. I highly recommend Superman Smashes The Klan if one wishes to teach their children about racism or is just looking for a good Superman story that has an impact on the reader.





Superman Smashes The Klan
Gene Luen Yang
DC
May 2020
ISBN# 1779504217
Paperback (also available in Hardcover and digital formats)
240 Pages


My reading copy came from the Prairie Creek Branch of the Dallas Public Library System.


Scott A. Tipple ©2020

Monday, September 18, 2017