The author of more than fifteen plays produced nationally and internationally, KIA CORTHRON came to national attention in the early nineties with her play Come Down Burning. Portraying characters who live in extreme poverty or crisis and whose lives are otherwise invisible, her plays paint a disturbing picture of American history and its repercussions on our most intimate relationships. Corthron's most recent awards include a Windham Campbell Prize for Drama, the Simon Great Plains Playwright (Honored Playwright) Award, the USA Jane Addams Fellowship Award, and the Lee Reynolds Award from the League of Professional Theatre Women, and she has developed work through various international residencies. She has also written for television, receiving a Writers Guild Outstanding Drama Series Award and an Edgar Award for The Wire. The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter is her first novel. She grew up in Cumberland, Maryland, and now lives in Harlem, New York.
"The Castle Cross the Magnet Carter is a stunning novel. Kia
Corthron plunges us into generations of American history, moving
with force and subtlety through the charged realities of race,
gender and region. It is a novel of ideas and politics, of
psychological complexity and of vibrant, kinetic language." --Margo
Jefferson, Negroland "Big, ambitious, challenging ... It tells the
20th-century history of the United States through the intersecting
lives of two white brothers and two black brothers. It is, by
turns, tender, brutal and redemptive." --Viet Thanh Nguyen,
Pulitzer Prize winning author of The Sympathizer in a Q&A in
the New York Times Book Review "There are whole chunks of writing
here that are simply sublime, places in which one gets swept away
by the way she subverts the rhythm of language to illuminate the
familiar and allow it to be seen fresh. ... [Corthron] blindsides
you. She sneaks up from behind. Sometimes, it is with moments of
humor, but more often with moments of raw emotional power --
moments whose pathos feels hard-earned and true.... [The Castle
Cross the Magnet Carter] succeeds admirably in a novel's first and
most difficult task: It makes you give a damn. It also does well by
a novel's second task: It sends you away pondering what it has to
say."--Leonard Fitts Jr., The New York Times Book Review (Editor's
Choice) "Kia Corthron's first novel is a stunning achievement by
any measure--a riveting saga of two twentieth-century American
families trapped inside the quotidian contradictions and
compulsions of race, disability, and sexuality. The untidiness of
history is conveyed through experiences, dreams, and inevitable
eruptions of violence, yet also unexpected patterns of escape and
possible orbits of justice." --Angela Y. Davis, UC Santa Cruz "When
I first read it, I was stunned. It's a haunting and devastating
tale, leavened with humor and hope ... I believe [The Castle Cross
the Magnet Carter] is the most important piece of writing about
twentieth-century America since James Baldwin's Another Country."
--playwright Naomi Wallace quoted in Elle magazine
"Kia Corthron has written a magnificent, truly epic tale of the
American Century told through the lives of two families, four
brothers, three generations, big movements and small moments. It
deserves a place among the great American novels precisely because
it cuts to the very heart of America: the color line. In vivid,
often breathtaking language, she reveals a changing world where
love and sex and violence can rain down in the same cloudburst, and
laughter and terror mingle easily, where the color line is not
merely a barrier but a jump rope, a noose, a sign, and above all a
tether that binds her characters and this country together."
--Robin D. G. Kelley, author of Thelonious Monk: The Life and Times
of an American Original (2009) "In the tradition of Toni Morrison,
Alex Haley and Alice Walker, she makes the personal political,
creating an epic portrayal of race in America."--Ms. magazine
"Playwright Corthron's big, open-hearted debut novel has echoes of
noted writers from the mid-20th century, which serves as its
backdrop: the social conscience of Steinbeck, the epic sweep of
Ferber, the narrative quirks of Dos Passos. Reading Corthron's
novel adds racial context to the classic works of these earlier
writers. The story follows two pairs of brothers: white Randall and
B.J., who grow up in rural Alabama; and black Eliot and Dwight, who
grow up in small-town Maryland. For all its size, this is a
modestly plotted quartet of coming-of-age stories. It begins in
1941, with studious teenage Randall sharing his love of literature
and his family history. B.J., who is five years his elder, is deaf,
and Randall has become his de facto caretaker. Brilliant Eliot,
who's all of six years old, and hard-working Dwight, who's 12,
narrate the parallel storyline in counterpointed first-person
chapters. Eliot's rackety prose plays nicely off Dwight's crisp,
dutiful sentences. The story moves to the late '50s, with all four
young men growing up in the thick of the Civil Rights movement.
Randall's ambition and B.J.'s condition necessitate a separation,
with Randall moving to New York. Eliot goes to law school and
Dwight gets a sensible job as a postman. The story then moves to
1993; Eliot and Randall cross paths, as readers suspect they must,
and there are consequences for both. Corthron jumps to 2010 for a
lengthy epilogue. This huge novel has the intimacy of memoir;
Corthron's narrative voice makes it easy for readers to immerse
themselves in the book, rarely coming up for air. (Jan.)"
--Publishers Weekly
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