The New York Times Book Review“Exceptional... To say that Loving Day is a book about race is like saying Moby-Dick is a book about whales.... [Mat Johnson’s] unrelenting examination of blackness, whiteness and everything in between is handled with ruthless candor and riotous humor.... Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub To Mobi. 7/11/2017 0 Comments We provide excellent essay writing service 24/7. Enjoy proficient essay writing and custom writing services provided by professional academic writers. Torrent Search. Torrents.me combines popular torrent sites and specialized private trackers in a torrent multisearch. A family in crisis, a town torn apart, and the boy who holds the secret has been cocooned in a coma for ten years. One warm, West Texas November night, a shy boy named Oliver Loving joins his classmates at Bliss County Day School’s annual dance, hoping for a glimpse of the object of his []. Loving Day is Johnson’s triumph and a reader’s great joy. Slaughterhouse five ebook free pdf. The book downloads as a.pdf file. Download Free Loving Day: A Novel By Mat Johnson EBOOK. Loving Day (novel) Loving Day is a 2015 novel by Mat. Loving Day - Mat Johnson Official Website. Mat Johnson.epub 3.11 MB; Pym LOVING DAY by Mat Johnson. Loving Day: A Novel by Mat Johnson. Read online, or download in secure EPUB format.
“A house divided against itself cannot stand,” Abraham Lincoln declared in his 1858 speech presaging the Civil War. Such a house sits at the heart of Mat Johnson’s ribald, incisive novel “Loving Day.” Bequeathed to the narrator, Warren Duffy, by his deceased father, it’s a roofless, ramshackle mansion in a black neighborhood in Philadelphia: “I look at the buckling floors. I look at the cracks in all the walls, the evidence of a foundation crumbling beneath us. I smell the char of the fire, the sweet reek of mold, the insult of mouse urine. I see a million things that have to be fixed, restored, corrected, each one impossible and each task mandatory for me to escape again.”
The house is haunted. There are ghosts, mostly of neighborhood crackheads — that is, if we take Warren’s word for it; our narrator’s psyche is as wrecked as his inheritance. An “inept” comic book artist — “My work is too realistic, too sober” — he has moved back to America from Wales after a failed business and broken marriage. He’s wrecked, too, by his liminal racial status: His father was an Irishman, his mother was black and he comfortably claims neither — call him a man divided against himself. “I am a racial optical illusion,” he says.
Warren lives and breathes what W. E. B. Du Bois called double consciousness, by which the American black person is “always looking at one’s self through the eyes of others. . . . One ever feels his two-ness, — an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body.” Except Warren’s body is white, making things even thornier; he’s perpetually performing a black identity that isn’t written all over his face — as when he describes “letting my black voice come out, to compensate for my ambiguous appearance. Let the bass take over my tongue. Let the South of Mom’s ancestry inform the rhythm of my words in a way few white men could pull off.”
In “Loving Day,” Johnson, author of the graphic novel “Incognegro” and the novel “Pym,” delivers an extended literary metaphor about race and mixed-race in America. It’s a semi-autobiographical one — he has called the book “my coming out as a mulatto” — that can at times feel belabored, but the novel ultimately triumphs because it is razor-sharp, sci-fi-flavored satire in the vein of George Schuyler, playfully evocative of black folklore à la Joel Chandler Harris — yet it never feels like a cold theoretical exercise. “Loving Day” is that rare mélange: cerebral comedy with pathos.
The vitality of our narrator deserves much of the credit for that. He has the neurotic bawdiness of Philip Roth’s Alexander Portnoy; the keen, caustic eye of Bob Jones in Chester Himes’s “If He Hollers Let Him Go”; the existential insight of Ellison’s Invisible Man. He’s prone to deadpan cynicism and such highbrow racial discourse as “I don’t know if I’m the byproduct of a racialized eroticism or a romantic rebellion of societal norms.” His self-laceration is endearing: “I never managed the duties of ‘son’ particularly well, in regard to both my parents. At ‘husband’ I was an even grander disappointment, and I stink of divorced man so bad that even I can smell it, as if every nose hair reeked of its own disappointment. I’ve been failing at ‘father’ for years without even realizing I could claim the title.”
Claiming that title is what “Loving Day” is largely about. In Philadelphia Warren meets Tal, the teenage daughter he never knew he had: “It’s a white girl. My white girl. It’s my black girl who looks like a white girl with a tan and a bad hair day.” They move into the decrepit haunted house together, where Warren turns father and racial-identity therapist, schooling Tal with gems like “There’s Team White, and there’s Team Black, O.K.? You probably didn’t even know you were on Team White before, most of Team White’s members never do. They just think they’re ‘normal.’ ”
Warren tries enrolling Tal in an Afrocentric school where a recruiter “speaks three languages: Street, Caucasian and Brotherman.” Then they fall under the spell of the Mélange Center, a “mixed-race community organization” that Warren calls “Mulattopia.” It’s populated by over-the-top characters whose “aspirational blackness” is “clear in their aesthetic choices. The teenage boy to my left wears a do-rag, presumably so you do-not see the straight brown strands peeking out from around his ears.” There’s a character named One Drop, a dreadlocked “WASPafarian,” and an entrance exam that includes questions like, “Was O. J. Simpson guilty?” and “What are your feelings about mayonnaise?” Father and daughter are awed: “The people whose appearance matches the identity they project, they have a place in society that they fit into with minimal cramping. But here, standing next to us, is everyone else. The human equivalent of mismatched socks.”
As Warren and Tal learn to wave the mixed-race flag, Warren has an affair with a Mélange Center stalwart, whom he idealizes for reasons both shallow and deep: She has an attractive rear end, she can mother his daughter, she has the conundrum of race all figured out. Tal, meanwhile, videotapes ghosts of the Mélange Center’s “first couple” — the husband and wife behind Loving v. Virginia, which legalized interracial marriage; in their honor, the Center prepares to celebrate “Loving Day,” which Warren dubs “mulatto Christmas.” In the end he is booted from the Center, its members set up camp on his lawn — he dubs it “Mixed Mews,” “Halfie Heights” and “Little Halfrica” — and his nagging fantasies about burning down the house he’s been burdened with come to a climactic head.
So what of this outsize symbol at the crux of “Loving Day” — the house and its ghosts? “Sure, they were ghosts. Ghosts of who they once were. You could say that about half of the city of Philadelphia,” Warren remarks. In one respect the decaying house is a metaphor for urban America, for the ghettos of Philadelphia, Detroit, Chicago: phantoms of the palatial African-American meccas they once were. The house is also America itself, as relentlessly haunted by the obdurate, divisive specter of race as Warren is. Race, after all, is ghostlike: a dubious entity invested with immense power by believers. When “Loving Day” ends with Warren surveying the “first couple” phantoms on his lawn and concluding, “I’m not scared. I see them. I see what they are, or what they were. Just lovers. Just people,” it’s an exorcism of sorts: the moment Warren demystifies his ghosts and forges peace with his racial struggle, the moment he sees humans and not raced humans.
At that moment, too, he is close to his daughter and thus closer to finding the elusive thing that his house also represents: home. While the Mélange Center is the target of satirical barbs, it also stands as a bona fide utopia, beckoning with community, family, belonging-ness. “It is a little thing, saying ‘I’m mixed’ instead of ‘I’m black,’ ” Warren says, “yet it’s like the difference between the comfort of wearing shoes that fit as opposed to bearing the blisters of shoes just one size too small.” Such claims potentially cast Warren as a “tragic mulatto,” that longstanding literary trope whose grand tragedy is an inability to fit in. But really “Loving Day” is playing with that tired trope; Warren is tragic, yes, but not because he is a “mulatto” — he’s tragic because he, like mostly everyone else in the novel, is haunted by ghosts of painful pasts and broken families: ex-partners, dead parents, rotted loves. Warren dreams of burning down his house because he longs to rid himself of these ghosts — “to be free of the past in a blaze of glory” — and thereby “regain the privilege to love like a fool.” The true tragedy of his narrative is that it’s a tragic story trapped, on account of Warren’s racial status, in the framework of a tragic mulatto story. And that’s perhaps the most tragic thing about the grand ghost that is race in America: It denies human suffering its universality, confining it to the lens of color.
Goodreads helps you keep track of books you want to read.
Rate this book
See a Problem?
We’d love your help. Let us know what’s wrong with this preview of Loving Day by Mat Johnson.
Not the book you’re looking for?Preview — Loving Day by Mat Johnson
From the author of the critically beloved Pym comes a ruthlessly comic and moving tale of a man discovering a lost daughter, confronting an elusive ghost, and stumbling onto the possibility of utopia.
'In the ghetto there is a mansion, and it is my father's house.'
Warren Duffy has returned to America for all the worst reasons: His marriage to a beautiful Welsh woman has com...more
'In the ghetto there is a mansion, and it is my father's house.'
Warren Duffy has returned to America for all the worst reasons: His marriage to a beautiful Welsh woman has com...more
Published May 26th 2015 by Spiegel & Grau
To see what your friends thought of this book,please sign up.
To ask other readers questions aboutLoving Day,please sign up.
![Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub Files Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub Files](/uploads/1/2/6/5/126529736/613085024.jpg)
Recent Questions
Anticipated Literary Reads For Readers of Color 2015 138 books — 169 voters
Goodreads Picks For Tournament of Books 2016 282 books — 1,366 voters
More lists with this book...
Rating details
|
Nov 03, 2016Meredith rated it really liked it · review of another edition
Loving Day is about one man’s quest to understand racial identity in America. In doing so, he comes to embrace his heritage and develop his own identity.
Warren Duffy’s life is in shambles. Recently divorced, Warren moves from Wales to Germantown, Pennsylvania, where he grew up. Broke and reeling from the failure of his marriage and failed comic bookstore business, his plan is to burn down the dilapidated mansion that he inherited from his later father and use the insurance money to start over....more
Warren Duffy’s life is in shambles. Recently divorced, Warren moves from Wales to Germantown, Pennsylvania, where he grew up. Broke and reeling from the failure of his marriage and failed comic bookstore business, his plan is to burn down the dilapidated mansion that he inherited from his later father and use the insurance money to start over....more
A very mixed read for me. I enjoyed the dark humor, the fact that this is based on Loving Day, and the fact that much of this seems autobiographical.
A man confused about where he fits in, with a black mother and an Irish father. He has always identified with his blackness, although he is light skinned. Divorced, returning to the city he was raised in after the death of his father, he is confronted with a very changed neighborhood and the wreck of a house. He soon finds out he also has a sevente...more
May 21, 2015Lark Benobi rated it really liked itA man confused about where he fits in, with a black mother and an Irish father. He has always identified with his blackness, although he is light skinned. Divorced, returning to the city he was raised in after the death of his father, he is confronted with a very changed neighborhood and the wreck of a house. He soon finds out he also has a sevente...more
Shelves: exuberant-books, 2015, male-identified-authors
Amazing first half. After that the book still hums along with humor--the scenes and events aren't necessarily all plausible and plot-related, but they are still very, very funny.
The more I think about this book, the more I love it, actually. I love that Mat Johnson wrote a book full of love and joy about racial identity politics, a topic that not very many people feel confident to laugh about. I revisited the novel just this afternoon, and realized that it was one of my most joyful reads of 201...more
The more I think about this book, the more I love it, actually. I love that Mat Johnson wrote a book full of love and joy about racial identity politics, a topic that not very many people feel confident to laugh about. I revisited the novel just this afternoon, and realized that it was one of my most joyful reads of 201...more
Jul 04, 2015Eilonwy rated it liked it
Warren Duffy is having a thirty-something crash. His marriage to a Welsh woman has fallen apart because he's not ready for fatherhood and her clock is ticking, and his 'career' as a comic book illustrator and seller has tanked. With nowhere else to go, he ends up in the mansion his father was renovating in the Germantown neighborhood of Philadelphia ... only to find himself suddenly presented with a 17-year-old Jewish daughter (who has darker skin than he's got), and facing a full-blown racial i...more
Feb 13, 2015Esil rated it really liked it
Thank you to Netgalley and the publisher for an opportunity to read an advance copy of Loving Day. 3 1/2 stars. I had never heard of Loving Day -- the date -- until half way through this book, when the narrator explained that Loving Day falls on June 12th every year and marks the anniversary of the 1967 decision in which the Supreme Court struck down the remaining anti miscegenation laws in a number of US states. Loving was the last name of Mildred and Charles Loving who were charged under anti...more
Nov 21, 2015La Tonya Jordan rated it really liked itRecommended to La Tonya by: Go On Girl Book - NAACP Selction Book
Biracial, a person of mixed heritage, half black and half European, a little Indian, African and European this is what mulattoes call themselves. And, if all else fails call yourself Puerto Rican. This is a very funny, witty, and cleverly written book about finding your racial identity for people of mixed heritage.
Warren Duffy has a black mother and an Irish father. He is pale enough to pass for white. But, he was raised in Germantown, a black section of Philadelphia, and to identify black (no...more
Warren Duffy has a black mother and an Irish father. He is pale enough to pass for white. But, he was raised in Germantown, a black section of Philadelphia, and to identify black (no...more
I loved Loving Day - it is a funny, thought-provoking romp based in the City of Brotherly Love that will definitely promote discussions on race and ethnicity in America. Steeped in satire and stereotypes, the novel’s protagonist, Warren Duffy, is a lovable character who seemingly can not catch a break: he’s recently divorced, unemployed, orphaned, and nearly broke. His Irish American father has recently died and Warren returns to Philadelphia to settle family affairs, including his inheritance:...more
Sep 09, 2016Monica **can't read fast enough** rated it liked it · review of another edition
I had a difficult time deciding how I felt about Loving Day when I read it back in September of last year. There are some very funny, laugh out loud moments in this story; especially in the beginning. There are moments of poignancy that made me think about how difficult it could be to have your outside appearance not fit with how you feel on the inside. Just how much our individual identities are often tied to our skin color and even how attractive others perceive us to be is often much more imp...more
Nov 27, 2014Jessica Woodbury rated it really liked it
This book belongs in that literary tradition of hapless protagonists who rarely act but are often acted upon, who keep finding themselves in a tight spot, who are surrounded by larger-than-life characters, and who inevitably muck it all up when they do try to change the course of their lives. But instead of being yet another hapless protagonist, Warren is a biracial man who identifies as black but passes as white. And every single thing that happens in LOVING DAY has something to do with racial...more
Jun 01, 2015Monica rated it really liked it · review of another edition Shelves: kindle_fiction, aoc, aoc-male, pub_2010s, racial-matters, positive-uplifting
Quirky, funny, interesting and thoughtful. This book was a bit of 'a year in the life' of a biracial (white and African American) young man (Warren) who discovers that he has a nearly grown daughter (Tal) with a Jewish girl from high school. Other than the sex, he had no real connection with the mother, but 17 years and one failed marriage later, he finds that having a daughter gave him purpose. She made him matter. The rub here is that Tal did not know she had any African-American blood. She wa...more
I don't know what all I expected from this book. It tackles many topics and I appreciate the way that the author constructed such an intricate fabric of characters and obstacles. I would read this book in a year or so as I am sure that my understanding will change.
Feb 13, 2015Erin rated it really liked it
ARC for review.
Warren Duffy is a mixed-race, recently-divorced, just-returned-ex-pat, minor league comic book writer. His divorce and the death of his father bring him back to his old neighborhood, Germantown in Philadelphia. His father had purchased, and was restoring an decrepit mansion in Germantown. With little money and few choices, Warren moves in, hoping to get it suitable for sale. In the mean time he needs money to live on, so he goes to a paid gig at a comic book convention, where he'...more
Sep 06, 2016Judy rated it really liked itWarren Duffy is a mixed-race, recently-divorced, just-returned-ex-pat, minor league comic book writer. His divorce and the death of his father bring him back to his old neighborhood, Germantown in Philadelphia. His father had purchased, and was restoring an decrepit mansion in Germantown. With little money and few choices, Warren moves in, hoping to get it suitable for sale. In the mean time he needs money to live on, so he goes to a paid gig at a comic book convention, where he'...more
Shelves: reading-group-pick, 21st-century-fiction
If ever there was a year to read novels about racial issues in America, this would be it. So I am. I read The Sellout in March; Homegoing in July, and now Loving Day.
Set in Philadelphia and in some ways similar to The Sellout, this one is more focused on the mixed race experience. Of course, if we didn't suffer so severely from racism in this country, being racially mixed would not be a problem.
Mat Johnson is a versatile writer who can move effortlessly between humor and serious heartfelt stuff...more
Set in Philadelphia and in some ways similar to The Sellout, this one is more focused on the mixed race experience. Of course, if we didn't suffer so severely from racism in this country, being racially mixed would not be a problem.
Mat Johnson is a versatile writer who can move effortlessly between humor and serious heartfelt stuff...more
Mar 12, 2015Londa rated it really liked it
Mat Johnson uses his unique humor to shed light on the dilemmas faced by biracial people in the United States. I found myself laughing out loud several times as I quickly read through this tale of one man's quest to become the parent to a child he didn't know existed. I highly recommend it and will seek out more of his work!
-------------------------
I received a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an unbiased review. No other consideration was offered, expected or received.
-------------------------
I received a copy of this book from NetGalley in exchange for an unbiased review. No other consideration was offered, expected or received.
Jul 08, 2015Cynthia rated it liked it
Blended Americans
“Loving Day” is a timely book. It deals with race, racism, and the sometimes amorphous definitions of both. The main character is a cartoon illustrator who’s the product of a black woman and an Irish man so he’s very light and often not recognized as being African American though that’s the identity he internalizes. The story is about his losses but also some surprise additions that bring challenges to his life. Along the way he falls in with a group of people with ambiguous her...more
“Loving Day” is a timely book. It deals with race, racism, and the sometimes amorphous definitions of both. The main character is a cartoon illustrator who’s the product of a black woman and an Irish man so he’s very light and often not recognized as being African American though that’s the identity he internalizes. The story is about his losses but also some surprise additions that bring challenges to his life. Along the way he falls in with a group of people with ambiguous her...more
Oct 05, 2015Lisa rated it did not like it
This had promise, with an opening line like 'In the ghetto there is a mansion, and it is my father's house.' The concept is interesting and thought provoking, but the plot just lost me as it got weirder and I couldn't get into it.
Feb 13, 2018Cheryl marked it as library-to-read
So I guess I need to learn something. Tal is 3/4 white, and is passing, and knows nothing of her black heritage. So what makes her black? Yes I know about the 'one-drop' rule, but wasn't that a bad thing? I hope my library has this book and that the author helps me overcome my ignorance. Sincerely.
Sep 22, 2015Scott Rhee rated it really liked it Shelves: black-studies, dysfunctional-family-drama, parenting, relationships, humor, male-issues
In 1958 a young woman named Mildred married a man named Richard Loving in Washington, D.C. They were both promptly arrested after returning to their hometown of Richmond, VA. Their crime? Mildred was a white woman and Richard was a black man.
Interracial marriage wasn’t just frowned upon in 1958, it was actually a crime in many states, punishable by jail time or, in the case of this young couple, forced expulsion from the state in which they lived.
They sued the state in a now-famous U.S. Supreme...more
Interracial marriage wasn’t just frowned upon in 1958, it was actually a crime in many states, punishable by jail time or, in the case of this young couple, forced expulsion from the state in which they lived.
They sued the state in a now-famous U.S. Supreme...more
50% of this book was great and the other half not so great. The best half explored the topic of being biracial from many aspects. The main protagonist, Warren Duffy, is half Caucasian from his Irish father and black from his mother. One day a young teenager, Tal, confronts Warren that he is her father. He is. At sixteen, Warren impregnates a fourteen year old Jewish girl, Cindy Karp. Cindy is deceased and grandfather Irving Karp is handing Tal off to Warren. Tal has dropped out of school. Warren...more
Feb 10, 2015Roy rated it liked it
Mat Johnson has a very funny (as in comical) way of looking at the world, perhaps because he grew up with a fair number of people looking at him funny (as in odd). Is he black, is he white? The box you decide to put a person into upon introduction, the label you instantly apply to their existence, shapes the dynamics of the relationship you will have with them. If you're not sure of which box to go with, which label to use, then what is there to guide your first impression? If you're not sure wh...more
May 22, 2015SibylM rated it really liked it
What a great read! As usual, I'm not into plot summaries in my reviews, you don't need me for that. Loving Day has one of my favorite opening lines of all time: 'In the ghetto there is a mansion, and it is my father's house.' Just this sentence alone lets you know you are in the hands of a writer who can pack story, emotion, and humor into a small literary space. Dark humor well done is hard to find in a novel, especially a novel that is also thoughtful, tender, has strong characters, and a stro...more
May 22, 2015Brittany (brittanymariereads) E. rated it really liked it Shelves: fiction, books-i-own, goodreads-first-reads
Loving Day was such an amazing and unique read. It was different from anything else that I have ever read. It was engaging and informational. It shares an important message about understanding and accepting who you are. The book primarily centers around people of African and European descent but the message can pertain to anyone.
Mat Johnson was able to take an important issue and turn it into a creative plot with real characters that, at times, had me laughing out loud. It was witty and smart in...more
Mat Johnson was able to take an important issue and turn it into a creative plot with real characters that, at times, had me laughing out loud. It was witty and smart in...more
May 27, 2015Allen Adams rated it it was amazing
http://www.themaineedge.com/buzz/race...
As a culture, we’ve gotten better about discussing race, but the truth is that we’re still pretty bad at it. We’re disquieted by and uncomfortable at the notion of having frank discussions; the reasons are legion, but almost all of us have one. So it’s remarkable when someone comes along and is able to tell a story that revolves around race without ever coming off as heavy-handed or preachy.
Mat Johnson’s “Loving Day” is just such a story, an equal-parts fu...more
Apr 05, 2015DeborahAs a culture, we’ve gotten better about discussing race, but the truth is that we’re still pretty bad at it. We’re disquieted by and uncomfortable at the notion of having frank discussions; the reasons are legion, but almost all of us have one. So it’s remarkable when someone comes along and is able to tell a story that revolves around race without ever coming off as heavy-handed or preachy.
Mat Johnson’s “Loving Day” is just such a story, an equal-parts fu...more
![Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub Files Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub Files](/uploads/1/2/6/5/126529736/255102291.jpg)
Shelves: own, tob-2016, netgalley
This is not an intentional play on the title, but I lovedLoving Day. Despite being up against some stiff competition, including Cynthia Bond's Ruby, Howard Jacobson's J, and Ausma Zehanat Khan's The Unquiet Dead, Loving Day is my favorite read of 2015 thus far.
Mat Johnson's writing is spectacular, with a slew of 'quotable quotes' (many of which I have posted in the Quotes section of Goodreads). Just consider these opening lines:
May 05, 2015Cosima rated it it was amazingMat Johnson's writing is spectacular, with a slew of 'quotable quotes' (many of which I have posted in the Quotes section of Goodreads). Just consider these opening lines:
In the ghetto there is a mansion, and it is my father's house. It s...more
Shelves: favorite-2015-reads, read-in-2015, african-american-culture, family-business, personal-library, favorites, arc, satire, colorism
Mat Johnson's 'Loving Day' tackles several issues: colorism, racism, ethnicity, identity and acceptance, family, responsibility, and (of course) love. Despite its chaos and controversy, this book is infused with tenderness and a unique brand of humor that showcases Johnson's awareness and razor sharp wit. All of this makes for a hectic yet entertaining read.
Warren Duffy has just come back to Philadelphia after the death of his father. A struggling comics artist with an ex-wife to reimburse for f...more
May 07, 2015Warren Duffy has just come back to Philadelphia after the death of his father. A struggling comics artist with an ex-wife to reimburse for f...more
Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub Files
Kasa Cotugno rated it it was amazing Shelves: arc, nyt-notable-book, culture-african-american, subj-african-america-themes, theme-family, loc-usa-mid-atlantic
Mat Johnson's day job as a university professor of creative literature is evident on every page of this heartfelt, at times, hilarious account of Warren Duffy's return to his hometown of Philadelphia. Duffy's father has just died, he's gotten a divorce from his Welsh wife and lost his comic book shop in Cardiff, and things couldn't be looking blacker, except for his skin. You see, Warren's father was Irish, his mother, African American, but his complexion has remained light. Upon his return to h...more
Loving Day Mat Johnson Epub Files Download
Witty, engaging, and laugh out loud hilarious at certain junctures.
Feb 04, 2015Genevieve rated it really liked it Shelves: contemporary-fiction, first-reads-arc, netgalley, reviewed
Mat Johnson Writer
If there is ever a writer today writing with a critically satirical eye to racial politics and identity it is Mat Johnson. In Loving Day, Johnson gives us a comic novel about uncomfortable-in-his-own-skin Warren Duffy. The novel opens with Duffy having to close down his comic book store in Wales and return to Philadelphia, his hometown, to deal with a run-down, roofless old mansion his late father left him. It’s a money-pit inheritance he’d rather not deal with, but there he is, broke, freshly...more
Oct 20, 2015Michelle Lancaster rated it really liked it
Fiction
Mat Johnson
Loving Day
Spiegel & Grau
Hardcover, 978-0-8129-9345-5 (also available as audiobook, as ebook, and on audio CD), 304 pgs., $26.00
May 26, 2015
“I’m not white, but I can feel the eyes of the few people outside on me, people who must think that I am, because I look white….This disconnect in my racial projection is one of the things I hate.… My mother was black — that counts, no matter how pale and Irish my father was.”
Warren Duffy’s father has died, and Warren returns to Philadel...more
Mat Johnson
Loving Day
Spiegel & Grau
Hardcover, 978-0-8129-9345-5 (also available as audiobook, as ebook, and on audio CD), 304 pgs., $26.00
May 26, 2015
“I’m not white, but I can feel the eyes of the few people outside on me, people who must think that I am, because I look white….This disconnect in my racial projection is one of the things I hate.… My mother was black — that counts, no matter how pale and Irish my father was.”
Warren Duffy’s father has died, and Warren returns to Philadel...more
May 19, 2015Karen M rated it really liked it
“In the ghetto there is a mansion, and it is my father’s house.” and so this book begins. There actually is a mansion. It is a registered historic building and it now belongs to Warren Duffy who doesn’t want it. This unwanted inheritance has only one destiny for Warren, fix as little as possible and sell it. There’s only one little complication with this plan, Warren’s daughter, Tal. Warren has just discovered he is the father of a seventeen year old who was the result of a very brief teenage tr...more
topics | posts | views | last activity |
---|---|---|---|
Around the Year i...:Loving Day by Mat Johnson | 1 | 7 | May 22, 2018 06:47PM |
Mixed Remixed Fes...:Loving Day by Mat Johnson is our 1st Book Club Pick | 15 | 38 | Oct 05, 2016 05:58AM |
Mixed Remixed Fes...:Interviews with Mat Johnson | 1 | 14 | Sep 12, 2016 02:53PM |
Go On Girl! Book...:*What Did You Think of the Book? | 2 | 6 | Aug 29, 2016 06:35AM |
Go On Girl! Book...:Videos | 1 | 2 | Aug 04, 2016 03:25PM |
Go On Girl! Book...:About Mat Johnson | 5 | 4 | Jul 07, 2016 08:03PM |
Recommend It | Stats | Recent Status Updates
See similar books…
See top shelves…
250followers
Mat Johnson is an American writer of literary fiction who works in both prose and the comics format. In 2007, he was named the first USA James Baldwin Fellow by United States Artists.
Johnson was born and raised in the Germantown and Mount Airy communities in Philadelphia.
His mother is African American and his father is Irish Catholic. He attended Greene Street Friends School, West Chester Univers...more
Johnson was born and raised in the Germantown and Mount Airy communities in Philadelphia.
His mother is African American and his father is Irish Catholic. He attended Greene Street Friends School, West Chester Univers...more
“A man's daughter is his heart. Just with feet, walking out in the world.” — 17 likes
“I have found that, in the African American oral tradition, if the words are enunciated eloquently enough, no one examines the meaning for definitive truth.” — 8 likes
More quotes…