Synopses & Reviews
At the age of nineteen, saxophone prodigy Latif James-Pearson boards a bus to Manhattan to find his aging idol, the great Albert Van Horn. The centers of Latifs universe soon become a Harlem boarding house, where he spends his days practicing intensely, and the downtown club where Van Horn's group performs and Latif hides in the shadows, listening. There, he begins a complex affair with an older white painter named Mona, and starts working for Say Brother, a charismatic drug dealer. But as Latifs frustrations with his playing mount, and the demands of balancing artistry, hustling, and love push him toward crisis, he is forced to confront his music, his past, and himself. A virtuosic story told with lyrical intensity, Shackling Water heralds the arrival of an important new voice in American literature.
Synopsis
Adam Mansbach captures the exhilarating cadences of jazz in this powerful debut novel about the adventures of a gifted young man looking for his muse in Harlem.
From the moment he hears tenor sax master Albert Van Horn play, Latif Pearson knows his destroy. So at the age of eighteen, he travels from Boston to Manhattan to meet his idol and hone his skills in New York's jazz clubs. As Latif grows from amateur to professional, discovering sounds that are his alone, he finds himself struggling with unexpected distractions, including an affair with an older white woman, and involvement with a drug dealer. His story turns the elements of a classic coming-of-age tale into a riveting improvisation played for lovers of both words and song.
About the Author
Adam Mansbach was born in 1976. He is the founding editor of the hip hop journal Elementary, and currently serves as an Artistic Consultant to Columbia Universitys Center for Jazz Studies. He is the author of the acclaimed poetry collection genius b-boy cynics getting weeded in the garden of delights, and a former drum technician for the Elvin Jones Jazz Machine. An MC and performer who collaborates with both jazz and hip hop musicians, he lives in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. His next novel follows three generations of a Jewish family.