Why did I love this book?
I was overwhelmed and carried away by this epic novel.
Everything about it is too much—an incredible richness of characters and stories and themes, and prose that matches Faulkner and Joyce with the best Black jazz. The heart of the book beats with the rhythms of Chicago streets and the Civil Rights movement and the life of a writer. But page after page invites me to laugh or cry.
1 author picked Divine Days as one of their favorite books, and they share why you should read it.
A virtuosic epic applauded by Stanley Crouch as "an adventurous masterwork that provides our literature with a signal moment," back in print in a definitive new edition
"I have an awful memory for faces, but an excellent one for voices," muses Joubert Jones, the aspiring playwright at the center of Divine Days. A kaleidoscopic whorl of characters, language, music, and Black experience, this saga follows Jones for one week in 1966 as he pursues the lore and legends of fictional Forest County, a place resembling Chicago's South Side. Joubert is a veteran, recently returned to the city, who works for…