Review of
Before I Forget
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Paperback: 336 pages
Publisher: Agate Bolden (March 1, 2009)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1932841431
ISBN-13: 978-1932841435
Product Dimensions: 8.9 x 6 x 1.4 inches
by
Leonard Pitts, Jr.
Reviewed by
Thumper
*giggling* I’m going to love writing this review. A little
while ago, I read and finished a wonderful debut novel,
Before I Forget by Leonard Pitts, Jr. I LOVED IT!! I have
not read a debut novel this extraordinary in years. The novel is
the story of a former R&B superstar of the 70s, who discovers he
is suffering from an early onset of Alzheimer. Before he loses
life as he knows it, he takes his teenage son on a cross country
road trip to visit his dying father. The novel tells a wonderful
story but it focuses on another purpose. I loved it!
James Moses ‘Mo’ Johnson is a has-been soul singer. Mo became
famous in 1974 when he wrote and recorded his first major hit.
But, that was then, this is now. Mo is almost 50 and he had
begun to forget things. He is diagnosed with Alzheimer’s
disease, even though he is a relatively young man, too young to
have Alzheimer, or so he thinks. As Mo struggles with coming to
terms with his illness, his 19 years old son Trey is having
major issues. Trey, along with a couple of his friends, robs a
convenience store and one of his partners kills the owner. Trey
is soon arrested and released on bail. As if dealing with Trey
is not enough, Mo receives word that his father Jack Johnson,
who Mo has not spoken to in 30 years, is dying. Mo decides to
take Trey cross country to get his “business” in order, with his
son and his father.
Before I Forget is absolutely, positively amazing!
It’s an ass wiper! Not only did Pitts use a subject, Alzheimer’s
disease, that I don’t come across in novels often; but Pitts
managed to accomplish the feat of writing a book with a message
that strikes the perfect balance blending a story with a
message. Many of the authors I’ve read who have tried to do this
fails miserably; either the message is too prominent in the
story making it obvious that the author is trying to preach, or
the story is dominant and the supposed message is MIA. The
manhood message was so deftly and smoothly incorporated in the
story, I did not mind reading a message story. Before I Forget
is a marvelous novel size parable. I applaud Pitts for doing a
remarkable job.
The message manhood: becoming a man; accepting and performing
the responsibilities of a man, and teaching our sons what a man
does and how a man behaves is refreshing and on point. Oh yeah,
it’s that deep. The beauty of the novel is that each of the male
characters in the book, not just the Johnson family, displays
different levels and aspects, positive and negative, of manhood.
I’m kinda stunned at how Pitts was able to accomplish this.
The characters; from the main characters Mo, Trey, and Jack
to the supporting ones, are well developed. The characters not
only seemed to walk and breathe air, but they all evolve. None
of the characters, well one, are in the same place, mentally or
emotionally, at the end of the novel as they were at the
beginning. They had to grow as men or Pitts would not have been
able to pull the novel off.
I wanted to jump up and down, but I stopped myself just in
time, when I finished this novel because Pitts knows how and
when to use a flashback. Flashbacks should be used sparingly.
When used at the proper time and is the proper length,
flashbacks can be a beautiful thing. Here lately, I have been
reading books where authors and their editors don’t have the
slightest clue as to how to use flashbacks. Pitts is not one of
those authors. In Before I Forget, the flashbacks are
informative and provide richer details to the story. If I rule
the world, I would twinkle my nose and make a copy of Before I
Forget materialize before every author that have pissed me off
with their improper use of flashbacks, with a note on the book
saying, Read and Learn!
I highly recommend Before I Forget! The book is fabulous and
unforgettable. I know I won’t forget it when I have to compile
my 2009 Best Book List at the end of the year. I am putting
Pitts down on my “authors to watch” list as well. If his first
book was this incredible, I cannot wait for his next one.
___________________________________
Related Links
Becoming
Dad: Black Men and the Journey to Fatherhood
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Amazon
by Leonard Pitts Jr.
Paperback: 263 pages
Publisher: Agate (June 1, 2006)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1932841172
The fatherless black family is a problem that grows to bigger
proportions every year as generations of black children grow up
without an adult male in their homes. Even the minority of black
men who do live with their children often struggle with the
role. As this dire pattern grows worse, what can men do who hope
to break it, when there are so few models and so little guidance
in their own homes and communities? Where can they learn to
"become Dad?"
When Pulitzer Prize-winning columnist Pitts-who himself grew up
with an abusive father whose absences came as a
relief-interviewed dozens of men across the country, he found
both discouragement and hope, as well as deep insights into his
own roles as son and father. An unflinching investigation, both
personal and journalistic, of black fatherhood in America, this
is the best, most pivotal book on this profoundly important
issue.