Poetryby Clarence Major
August 1, 1988 6 x 9 128 pages 978-0-918273-43-7
A book-length poem by an African-American author that uses the city of Venice as its backdrop, considering issues of racial and national identity. By the author of My Amputations.
In Surfaces and Masks, Clarence Major becomes heir to the great tradition of the American-goes-to-Europe novels of James and Twain. Major is a pointillist, impressionist, and breakneck historian, creating a tapestry that utilizes and satirizes his chosen subject, Venice. With the same unstoppable intelligence that inspired his award-winning novel, My Amputations, he creates a thoroughly modern picture of this glittering, grandiose swamp. A multifaceted portrait in a funhouse mirror, Surfaces and Masks becomes a reevaluation of what it means to be an American and a black writer in this century, while surrounded by the decay of the past.