Bailey's Cafe

Gloria Naylor author Irenosen Okojie editor

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Little, Brown Book Group

Published:25th Dec '34

£8.99

This title is due to be published on 25th December, and will be despatched as soon as possible.

Bailey's Cafe cover

WITH A NEW INTRODUCTION BY IRENOSEN OKOJIE

'Gloria Naylor is gifted with timeless wisdom, bottomless empathy, and limitless language. Her novels will shine a light for readers and writers for generations to come' Tayari Jones, author of An American Marriage, winner of the Women's Prize for Fiction

In post-World War II Brooklyn, on a quiet backstreet, there's a little place that draws people from all over-not for the food, and definitely not for the coffee. An in-between place that's only there when you need it, Bailey's Cafe is a crossroads where patrons stay for a while before making a choice: Move on or check out?

Patrons include Sadie, the ladylike alcoholic with a mania for cleanliness; Sweet Esther, who caters to unspeakable appetites in a nearby 'boarding house', taking payment only in white roses; and Mariam, the Ethiopian child who may be the bearer of a miracle. Naylor's breath-taking novel is an enthralling fusion of lives whose courage, mystery and humour suggest nothing less than a blues tapestry of America.


'Gloria Naylor was one of the greatest novelists who ever lived. Every single one of her works was masterful, crafted with the kind of rare artistic brilliance that places her in extremely limited company . . . She holds a hallowed place in the canon, and also in hearts, minds, bodies, and spirits' Robert Jones, Jr., author of The New York Times bestselling novel, The Prophets

Gloria Naylor is gifted with timeless wisdom, bottomless empathy, and limitless language. Her novels will shine a light for readers and writers for generations to come. -- Tayari Jones, author of AN AMERICAN MARRIAGE
Told in contrasting shades of harsh, comic and magic realism ... Crackles with passion and wit ... An unforgettable successor to Ellison's metaphor of the invisible man, and as incandescent * Los Angeles Times *
A virtuoso orchestration of survival, suffering, courage and humour * New York Times Book Review *
A powerhouse of a novel . . . It is a book with something of a comic Ellisonian or Faulknerian rhythm, a defiantly hopeful stance. Bailey's Cafe absorbs us in the mastery of its telling. * New York Newsday *
A collective blues performance in prose - a lyrical remembrance and triumph over personal catastrophe . . . A sublime achievement * People *
A cantata sung by several voices. This mix of myth, history and mysticism ... offers a sensibility as rich in potential as that of the Latin American magical realists ... Moving and memorable -- Gail Caldwell * Boston Globe *
Irrefutably, Gloria Naylor was one of the greatest novelists who ever lived. Every single one of her works was masterful, crafted with the kind of rare artistic brilliance that places her in extremely limited company. She is likely best known for her National Book Award-winning debut work, The Women of Brewster Place, but that is just the tip of the proverbial iceberg. Whether the divine Bailey's Cafe, the haunting Linden Hills, or the exquisite Mama Day (one of my favorite novels of all-time), Naylor's skill in weaving together culture, heartbreak, joy, magic, terror, laughter, pain, and love-which is to say, life-is extraordinary. There is something both mundane and cosmic about her writing that captures the human condition in a way that perhaps no other writer did or will. Her work is, for me, a shout, a praisesong, a hosanna, a hallelujah, a Black fist in the air; àse! She holds a hallowed place in the canon, and also in hearts, minds, bodies, and spirits. She was one of the blessed ones -- Robert Jones, Jr., author of The New York Times bestselling novel, THE PROPHETS

ISBN: 9780349016191

Dimensions: unknown

Weight: 41g

336 pages