1,001 Novels: A Library of America
The Love Songs of WEB Dubois (2021)
by Honore Jeffers
Eatonton, Georgia
Georgia 10/26
I love a writer with some ambition, even if I don't love the book. That's the case here with The Love Songs of WEB Dubois, a debut novel with some gusto written by author/professor Honore Jeffers. It would be fair to call this book "over-stuffed" in that it covers multiple generations (and multiple characters within each generation) of a mixed-race but basically African-American family that has done well in 19th and 20th century Georgia without getting into any trouble. The main protagonist is Ailey Pearl Garfield, one of three sisters and the daughter of a medical doctor and his wife. She is pretty clearly a stand-in for the author herself, as her experiences and physical description mirror that of the author.
At 816 pages, the plot resembles something like a 19th century Russian novel written by Dostoyevsky or Tolstoy but the subject matter is distinctly modern, with a strong current of child-sexual abuse and its consequences running through the family from start to finish. I thought The Love Songs of WEB Dubois wasn't perfect, but it was interesting, and it will certainly be a top 5 book from Georgia and top 10 for the Chapter (Georgia/Florida/Louisiana/Alabama/Mississippi).
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