Pushkin and the Queen of Spades Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Pushkin and the Queen of Spades Book

The unacknowledged boom in African-American fiction continues with Pushkin and the Queen of Spades, a second novel from Alice Randall, author of the nearly banned Gone with the Wind parody, The Wind Done Gone. Windsor Armstrong is a Harvard-educated professor of Russian literature whose son, Pushkin--named after the great Afro-Russian poet--defied all her hopes for him by becoming a star football player. Any other mother would be proud, Windsor reflects. But she had wanted her son to transcend the narrow roles allotted to him as a black man in America. She had wanted more for Pushkin--a place in black bohemia, a place carved out by the writings of Dubois and others. And now, he rejects her again by choosing a Russian lap dancer as his wife. Windsor's musings--by turns angry, conflicted, wistful, and eccentric--are among the most penetrating comments on race and mother love in contemporary fiction. She recalls her Motown childhood; her cruel, self-hating mother's climb through white society in Washington, D.C.; and the refuge she found at Harvard, slowly uncovering the roots of her racism and her shock and sadness that Pushkin has fallen in love with a woman who does not look like her. And what does Pushkin want from Windsor? Only the truth about who his father is. Though the novel is a little longer than it needs to be, readers who stay with Randall through the switchbacks and cul-de-sacs of her narrative will be rewarded with stylistic fireworks and an unparalleled examination of black racism. --Regina MarlerRead More

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  • Product Description

    Windsor Armstrong is a polished, Harvard-educated African American professor of Russian literature. Her son, Pushkin X, is an exceedingly famous pro football player, an achievement that impresses his mother not at all. Even more distressing, however, is that her beloved son has just become engaged to a gorgeous white Russian emigré who also happens to be a lap dancer.
    For Windsor, this is no laughing matter. Determined to get to the source of it, she embarks on a journey into her own rich past: to her Motown childhood, where love came disguised as a sharply dressed gangster; to Harvard, where she endured the humiliation of being an unwed black teen mother; to Russia and the brilliant poet Alexander Pushkin, great-grandson of an African slave. As she moves ever closer to the secret that has cast a shadow over her life, she discovers that the half lies she has fed her son don"t add up to the beauty of the truth.
    Balancing sharp-witted humor with profundity, sexiness with pyschological depth, Pushkin and the Queen of Spades is an exhilarating ride straight through the racially divided heart of contemporary
    America that probes the universal question of what it means to be
    a good mother.

  • 0618433600
  • 9780618433605
  • Alice Randall
  • 4 May 2004
  • Houghton Mifflin Harcourt (HMH)
  • Hardcover (Book)
  • 288
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