Bern Book
A Record of a Voyage of the Mind
Jesse McCarthy author Vincent O Carter author
Format:Paperback
Publisher:Dalkey Archive Press
Published:23rd Jun '22
Should be back in stock very soon
- Serial rights targeting The New Yorker, Harper's, Paris Review, The Nation
- Print and digital publicity targeting NPR, The Atlantic, Bookforum, Los Angeles Times, New York Review of Books, London Review of Books, New York Times, Washington Post, The Nation
- Promotion and outreach to university literature, history, and black studies departments
- Review copies sent targeting all major print and digital literary media outlets, reviewers, and booksellers; additional copies available upon request
- Promotion on publisher's website and social media; promotion via e-newsletters to booksellers, reviewers
The Bern Book is a travelogue, a memoir, a “diary of an isolated soul” (Darryl Pinckney), and a meditation on the myth and reality of race in midcentury Europe and America. In 1953, having left the US and settled in Bern, Switzerland, Vincent O. Carter, a struggling writer, set about composing a “record of a voyage of the mind.” The voyage begins with Carter’s furiously good-humored description of how, every time he leaves the house, he must face the possibility of being asked “the hated question” (namely, Why did you, a black man born in America, come to Bern?). It continues with stories of travel, war, financial struggle, the pleasure of walking, the pain of self-loathing, and, through it all, various experiments in what Carter calls “lacerating subjective sociology.” Now this long-neglected volume is back in print for the first time since 1973.
“The Bern Book is a work about ambivalence, escape, evasion, and the expatriate’s creed of noble procrastination, noble withdrawal. Carter is that familiar, defensive figure in the café, the man who refuses to be practical, the artist with impossible high standards, the stranger who is difficult to help.”—Darryl Pinckney, Out There: Mavericks of Black Literature "Episodically riveting."—Kirkus Reviews "Like other black writers of his time, notably James Baldwin and Richard Wright, Carter had left the United States and moved to Europe to try his hand as an expatriate author. Unlike those novelists—now in the pantheon of black literature—Carter drew scant attention. Baldwin may have written Nobody Knows My Name, but the title applied even more to Carter."—San Francisco Chronicle
ISBN: 9781628973853
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: unknown
352 pages