9781596912410
Slumberland share button
Paul Beatty
Format Paperback
Dimensions 5.52 (w) x 8.36 (h) x 0.72 (d)
Pages 256
Publisher Bloomsbury USA
Publication Date August 2009
ISBN 9781596912410
Book ISBN 10 1596912413
About Book

Slumberland is laugh-out-loud funny and its wit and satire can be burning…There are incredible moments of tenderness…Beatty is a kind of symphonic W. E. B. Du Bois.”—Los Angeles Times

Ferocious, bombastic, and hilarious, Slumberland is vintage Paul Beatty and belongs on the shelf next to Jonathan Lethem, Colson Whitehead, and Junot Diaz. In this widely praised novel of race, identity, and underground music, DJ Darky has created the perfect beat. Now, he must seek out Charles Stone, a little known avant-garde jazzman, who can help bring his sonic masterpiece to fruition.

Reviews

From the Publisher

“What Gore Vidal did for sex and gender constructs, Beatty does for race and prominent black Americans, with sacred cow-tipping on nearly every page. Waterfalls of wordplay that pool and merge like acid jazz on the page.”—Washington Post

“A remarkably strange and funny meditation…revelatory and mind-blowing.”—Seattle Times

Publishers Weekly

The narrator of Beatty's late '80s picaresque, Ferguson W. Sowell-aka DJ Darky-is so attuned to sound that he claims to have a "phonographic memory." Ferguson, who does porno film scores for the money in L.A., has a cognoscenti's delight in jazz, and he's close to obsessed with Charles Stone, aka "the Schwa," a musician who apparently disappeared into East Germany in the '60s. Ferguson receives an already-scored tape whose soundtrack is so rich and strange and "transformative" that it must be by Schwa. Ferguson is soon on his way to Slumberland, a bar in West Berlin to which he sources the tape. He arrives just in time to experience the sexual allure black men exercise on Cold War Berliners, and stays long enough to watch the city's culture fall apart after the fall of the Wall. With its acerbic running commentary on race, sex and Cold War culture, the latest from Beatty, author of Tuffand editor of The Anthology of African American Humor, contains flashes of absurdist brilliance in the tradition of William Burroughs and Ishmael Reed. But the plot seems little more than an excuse to set up a number of comic routines, denying the story a driving, unifying plot. (July)

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Library Journal

In his third novel (after Tuff and The White Boy Shuffle), Beatty creates a story from music. DJ Darky, a Los Angeles musician who, like a modernist jazzman, creates beats from found sounds, travels to Berlin, Germany, in search of his avant-garde idol, Charles Stone, aka the Schwa. Shortly after discovering the Schwa's beat in a mysterious envelope, DJ Darky sends a demo with his own infallible sound to the Slumberland Bar in Berlin as an application for the position of "jukebox sommelier," for which he's immediately accepted. Beatty takes us into pre-Wall Berlin and finishes just after liberation, ending in a crescendo of incomprehensible rhythm from DJ Darky and the Schwa's collaboration that re-creates a metaphorical wall. The narrative touches on oppression and the inexplicable, transcendent power of music, both of which translate to the American race struggle. Beatty's rolling Faulknerian prose has been praised for its "dazzling linguistic flights" (Salon), and this newest novel is no different; the dense imagery and sound create a synesthesia carnival. Recommended for all libraries.
—Stephen Morrow

Kirkus Reviews

Beatty's ferociously witty and original third novel (Tuff, 2000, etc.) follows a Los Angeles DJ called Darky, who, having created a revolutionary "perfect beat," heads to late-1980s Berlin to find the obscure, incomparable jazzman known as the Schwa and get him to lay down a track over it. If that sounds preposterous, it is-gloriously so. Helped by a mysterious call from a Berlin bar called Slumberland and by the near-simultaneous arrival from Germany of a man-on-chicken sex film scored by someone who can only be the Schwa, DJ Darky leaves California for a job as Slumberland's "jukebox-sommelier," a position he's invented and quickly perfects. He earns a living and a reputation (and the erotic adventures that come with said reputation) by way of his encyclopedic knowledge of music, especially African-American music. Mostly what he finds in Germany, though, is the time and distance required to ruminate, with a scabrous wit that spares nothing and no one, about blackness (his own and that of others), about music, about the United States and Germany, about sex, about language. This is a book made almost entirely of riffs and harangues, but the riffs are so virtuosic and so hilarious that the reader is hard-pressed to take note of, much less to lament, minor omissions like plot or character development. Whether he's warning against the "cutie-pie cabal" of The All-New Mickey Mouse Club; spinning a track for a philosopher skinhead; hypothesizing about Harriet Tubman or Nabokov or Big Daddy Kane; rhapsodizing about every sound he's ever heard (he has a "phonographic memory"); or brilliantly spinning an analogy between East Germans after reunification and African-Americans during Reconstruction,DJ Darky brings the full funk. He's not a man for half-measures, especially not for half-measures of rhetoric, and he loves nothing more than turning some anodyne myth or ill-considered conventional wisdom inside out and stomping on it for a while. Rhythmically. Marvelous. Agent: Sarah Chalfant/The Wylie Agency

The Barnes & Noble Review

The novelist and poet Paul Beatty is fond of proclamations both grandiose and hilarious. After all, he's the kind of writer who had the audacity to open his first published novel -- The White Boy Shuffle -- with the line: "This messiah gig is a bitch." Two novels, two poetry collections, and an anthology later, he's mellowed not a bit. Slumberland, Beatty's first novel in seven years -- begins with an emancipation proclamation of sorts: "The Negro is now officially human...as mediocre and mundane as the rest of the species." This comes as good news to his narrator, Ferguson W. Sowell, a.k.a. DJ Darky, who declares: "Blackness is passé and I for one couldn't be happier, because now I'm free to go to a tanning salon if I want to, and I want to."

Freedom, in Beatty's work, includes the right to be impolite, impolitic, irreverent, trivial, and profane -- and in doing so to reach something that feels profound and even profoundly political. Most of all, it includes the right to be funny. Paul Beatty is the poet laureate of black humor. In fact, "Black Humor" is the title of a 2006 essay he wrote for The New York Times in which he proclaimed his boredom with the dominant tradition of "sobriety" in African-American literature -- skewering Maya Angelou, James Earl Jones, James Baldwin, Alice Childress and Richard Wright along the way -- and yearned for a black Calvin Trillin, Bennett Cerf or Mark Twain (he claimed that as a child he threw his copy of Angelou's I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings into the trash, then retreated to his room to "self-medicate with James Clavell, John Irving, Joseph Wambaugh, the Green Lantern and Archie and Jughead").

In search of what he calls the tradition of "black literary insobriety," he created his own: both by compiling his predecessors in Hokum: An Anthology of African-American Humor, published in 2006, and, most of all, by demonstrating in his own work that an African-American literary writer can sample Thomas Pynchon, Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Pryor, Godard, and Woody Allen and Spencer Tracy movies and slander Oprah Winfrey, Justin Timberlake, Ayn Rand, and Wynton Marsalis (for whom he seems to have a deep, personal hatred).

It seems entirely fitting, then, that the narrator of Slumberland is a DJ, a guy whose art is made entirely of mash-ups between seemingly incongruous elements. Ferguson Sowell is the son of "an embittered literature PhD who worked for the county naming the streets within walled communities" (a typical assignment, according to his son: "names to reflect the area's Mexican heritage and yet have enough of an 'upscale' ring to convey to any Mexicans foolhardy enough to move to the Santa Clarita hinterlands that they weren't wanted.") and a mother who reads E. L. Doctorow and The New Yorker ("If I could collapse all my memories into one sound," says Ferguson, "it would be the sound of those pages turning. Crisp. Mordant. Pipe-smoking urbane.") As a kid, Ferguson receives a perfect SAT score in math but ends up at the Wilmer Jessop Academy of Music, majoring in audiovisual studies ("the music school equivalent of special education"); his college thesis is a "baroque/brat-rap/mash-up oratio" of Handel's Messiah composed entirely of elements from the Beastie Boys' License to Ill. (Still, he keeps a copy of his SAT scores in his wallet, reasoning that, if stopped, he could defend himself by saying: "I don't know what other nigger did what to whom, but it couldn't be me. Look, 800 math.")

Ferguson is obsessed with language: He literally must invent new words to describe himself and his surroundings. He considers himself an "etymolophile" (which, his buddy at the dictionary points out, wouldn't be a lover of words, as Ferguson has it, but a lover of the origin of words) with a "phonographic memory" and claims to remember every sound he ever heard: "Every dropped nickel, raindrop drip-drop, sneaker squeak, and sheep bleat...It's like my entire life is a song I can't get out of my head." His record collection, he says, "is to DJing what the Louvre is to painting" and he aspires to make the perfect Mona Lisa beat that, like the painting, will have "allure of a piece of art that not everyone adores but no one hates."

And, according to his friends, he does just that. Armed with the perfect beat, there is only one thing to do: Find the musician nicknamed the Schwa, a reclusive genius who, over the course of the novel, will have his music compared to Nabokov, Albert Einstein's hair, and "the part in Pagliacci where the fucking clown starts crying," who is credited with teaching Philip Glass minimalism and, at one point, will turn a paperback copy of a Faulkner novel into a musical instrument.

The search takes Ferguson to Berlin, a development that allows Beatty to have a grand time rendering the experience of a black male expat living in Europe in the late '80s. Ferguson's arrival coincides neatly with the fall of the Berlin Wall and draws direct parallels between divided Berlin and America during the Civil War. Ferguson lands in West Berlin "happy as a runaway slave," only to discover that the city seems to be "populated entirely by Quaker abolitionists" -- that is, people who patronize him with politeness. After the Wall comes down, Ferguson explicitly compares East Berlin to the South after Reconstruction ("the country had every manifestation of the post-1865 Union save Negro senators and decent peanut butter"). At first, his West German friends embrace their neighbors as they would "step-sisters and step-brothers sired by the same philandering father", but soon their "affinity for their poor relations to the east begins to sour." Ferguson reflects: "I suppose being East German was a lot like being black -- the constant sloganeering, the protest songs, no electricity or long-distance phone service -- so I gave the East German Negro a hearty soul shake and black power salute and wished him luck with the minimum-security emancipation he'd no doubt serve in the German republic."

As in his previous novels, Beatty doesn't so much construct a plot as much as erect a scaffolding on which to hang the manic musings and observations of a supremely smart and unorthodox narrator. He began his career as a performance poet for the Nuyorican Café, and in certain ways, his novels resemble the work of the best kind of stand-up comics -- Richard Pryor, Sarah Silverman, George Carlin -- who use taboo and an acute attention to the details of language to shock one into thinking in new ways. He incorporates the art of the one-liner much the same way that Junot Diaz and Michael Chabon incorporate pulp fiction and comics into their novels, in the process making both pop culture and literature more visceral, intelligent, and interesting. The searing brilliance of his riffs is dazzling. --Amy Benfer

Amy Benfer has worked as an editor and staff writer at Salon, Legal Affairs, and Paper magazine. Her reviews and features on books have appeared in Salon, The San Francisco Chronicle Book Review, The Believer, Kirkus, and The New York Times Book Review.