Reginald Gibbons is a
National Book Award nominee for his book of poetry Creatures of a A Day.
SWEETBITTER (Jackleg Press; Publication:
August 1, 2023) takes place in east Texas in 1910 during the time of white
rule-not by law but by lynch mob. Amid the suffocating racism and fear,
half-Choctaw, half-white Reuben Sweetbitter and Martha Clarke, a white woman,
fall in love. This is an authentic,
richly detailed novel with themes of sacrifice, fear, and the loss of one's
identity, inspired by Gibbons' family -- whose paternal grandfather was
half-Choktaw -- and his experiences growing up in protestant evangelical Texas
where racism and white supremacy was rampant. Library Journal writes: "Atypical of love stories, this
realistic work maintains a historical perspective in lending the couple
short-lived happiness."
ADDITIONAL PRAISE | SWEETBITTER
"A sweeping yet intimate first
novel that tells the story of the Choctaw Indians through the troubled life of
one Reuben S. Sweetbitter, half Choctaw, half white… An absorbing story."
—Publishers Weekly
"This
is an adventure story and a romance, but in Gibbons' hands, it's that and much
more. Exquisitely rendered and deeply felt, this is as astute and absorbing as
fiction gets." —Booklist
“Reginald Gibbons
brings a masterful poet's gifts to his debut as a novelist. Complex and
challenging, Sweetbitter will reward readers on every page." –Charles
Johnson
Buy Links:
Amazon https://www.amazon.com/Sweetbitter-Reginald-Gibbons/dp/1737513420/
Barnes & Noble: https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sweetbitter-reginald-gibbons/1012421076
Bookshop: https://bookshop.org/p/books/sweetbitter-reginald-gibbons/19865347
Excerpt Teaser:
PROLOGUE
Many
generations ago Aba, the great spirit above, created many men, all Chahtah, who
spoke the language of the Chahtah, and under- stood one another. They came from
the heart of the earth and were made of clay, and before them no men had ever
lived.
One day they
all gathered and looking upward wondered what the blue of the sky and the white
of the clouds were made of. They determined to try to reach the sky by building
a great mound. They piled up rocks to build a mound that would reach the sky
but at night the wind blew from above so strongly that the rocks fell down. The
second day, too, they worked, building the mound but again that night the wind
came while they slept and it pushed down their work. On the third day they
began yet again. But that night the wind blew so hard it hurled the rocks of
the mound down upon the builders themselves.
They were
not killed, but when daylight came and they crawled out from beneath the rocks
that had fallen on them and they began to talk to one another, they discovered that
they could no longer understand each other. They spoke many languages instead
of one. Some of them spoke the original language, the Chahtah language. Others,
who no longer spoke this language, began to fight with those who did. Finally
they separated. The Chahtah remained, the original people, and lived near nanih
waya, the mound they had not been able to complete. And the others went north
and east and west and encountered more tribes.
In this way
or some other, all the peoples of the earth were created, each from some
substance and thus of different appearance, and at times struggling against each
other. This is what the Chahtah told to a white missionary. But this was only a
little of what the Chahtah knew. It was not for that man to know everything. And
then he wrote mistaken things about them.
Excerpted from SWEETBITTER by
Reginald Gibbons © 2023 by Reginald Gibbons, used with permission from JackLeg
Press.
MORE ABOUT REGINALD GIBBONS
His translations include Selected Poems of Luis Cernuda (Sheep Meadow), Sophocles’ Selected Poems: Odes and Fragments (Princeton University Press), and his co-translations include Sophocles’ Antigone and Euripides’ Bakkhai (both with the late Charles Segal, Oxford University Press).
Gibbons’ poems and short fiction have been published in Harper’s, The New
York Times, The Atlantic, The Paris, Review, Poetry, The Georgia Review,
American Poetry Review, The Shanghai Review, Tikkun, Ploughshares, Southern Review,
Southwest Review, The Chicago Tribune, and many other
magazines and periodicals. From 1981 to 1997, he was the editor of TriQuarterly magazine. His book about
poetry, How Poems Think, is a gallery of aspects of poetry
that combine feeling and poetic cognition (University of Chicago Press). Gibbons
has won fellowships from the Fulbright Foundation, the Guggenheim Foundation,
the National Endowment for the Arts, and the Center for Hellenic Studies. He
has received several prizes, including the Folger Shakespeare Library’s O. B.
Hardison, Jr., Poetry Prize, and the Fuller Award for lifetime achievement from
the Chicago Literary Hall of Fame. Since 1981, he has taught creative writing
at Northwestern University, where he is an emeritus Frances Hooper Professor of
Arts and Humanities. From the 1980s till the 2010s, he also taught at more than
twenty residencies of the Warren Wilson MFA for Writers.
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