I just finished Baby Brother's Blues, Pearl Cleage's new novel, which will be released at the end of next month. The copy I have is an early copy from the publisher-no images on the cover, not a hint of what to expect. The blurb on the back said that it was a continuation of the story of Regina and Blue, the lovers from Some Things I Never Thought I'd Do. However, this is not a sequel. While Pearl's earlier novels can be loosely classified as "contemporary romances"-though I call them "Trojan Horse Romances", owing to the political messages she slips in- Baby Brother's Blues is more of a noir thriller. Maybe she has made a new genre, "Trojan Horse Thriller."
You don't have to read many pages to know that you are reading something very different than what Pearl usually writes. For one thing, it is in the third-person point of view, and the opening character is a man: Baby Brother, the title character. But I wouldn't say that he is the main character. As crazy as this may sound, this is a book that doesn't really have a main character. Instead, this is a novel about a community. General wisdom says that the protagonist is the character to whom the story happens. Well, the events in this powerful and serious novel don't happen to any one person. The community, the city, the neighborhood, Atlanta's West End-this is the main character.
The novel's cast includes Blue Hamilton, the self-appointed Emperor of the West End, his right-hand man General, and General's lover Brandi (who works as a stripper at Montre's). Precious Hargrove, the righteous sister-politician is back, along with her son Kwame who has a terrible secret. Baby Brother, a Iraq War deserter with a rap sheet and bad attitude, is our guide through an underground world of down-low brothers and other parts of Atlanta that most people don't talk about. While most of the characters live in the West End which has been made safe by Blue Hamilton's rule, this book is extremely gritty. There are crooked cops and strange bedfellows, betrayal and revenge, murder and suicide. The violence is not for the faint-hearted, but it is though Pearl is saying, "It hurts you to read about it, but there are people LIVING this life!"
Usually, when I get one of Pearl's books in the mail, I make some tea, grab some animal crackers and gobble it up in a single sitting. But this is a book that makes you slow down and take your time. You have to ponder it, read every word, because it's not a story that goes where you think it's going. The characters are many, but fully drawn and haunting. The choices they make aren't easy and the consequences are not always pretty.
But even through the ugliness and corruption, Pearl Cleage's optimism still shines through. As always, she writes with a big heart and gives the reader hope that self-love, black-on-black love is what we need if we are going to make it through these terrible times. Regina and Blue are expecting a baby and you feel like their love that has endured lifetimes will be here for a few more. And of course, we have our own Pearl, who tells it like it is, unflinching but tender with a compassion and honesty that always reminds us that the power is ours.