Colson Whitehead is the #1 New York Times bestselling author of The
Underground Railroad, which in 2016 won the Pulitzer Prize in
Fiction and the National Book Award and was named one of the Ten
Best Books of the Year by The New York Times Book Review, as well
as The Noble Hustle, Zone One, Sag Harbor, The Intuitionist, John
Henry Days, Apex Hides the Hurt, and The Colossus of New York. He
is also a Pulitzer Prize finalist and a recipient of the MacArthur
and Guggenheim Fellowships. He lives in New York City.
Colson Whitehead is available for select speakingengagements. To
inquire about a possible appearance,please contact Penguin Random
House Speakers Bureauat speakers@ penguinrandomhouse.com or
visitwww.prhspeakers.com.
WINNER OF THE PULITZER PRIZE FOR FICTION • New York Times
Bestseller • Longlisted for The National Book Award • Winner
of The Kirkus Prize • Winner of the Orwell Prize for Political
Fiction • One of Publishers Weekly's 10 Best Books of the
Year
"A necessary read." —President Barack Obama
"This is a powerful book by one of America's great writers. . . .
Without sentimentality, in as intense and finely crafted a book as
you'll ever read, Whitehead tells a story of American history that
won’t allow you to see the country in the same way again." —Toronto
Star
"Colson Whitehead continues to make a classic American genre his
own. . . . The narration is disciplined and the sentences plain and
sturdy, oars cutting into water. Every chapter hits its marks. . .
. Whitehead comports himself with gravity and care, the steward of
painful, suppressed histories; his choices on the page can feel as
much ethical as aesthetic. The ordinary language, the clear pane of
his prose, lets the stories speak for themselves. . . . Whitehead
has written novels of horror and apocalypse; nothing touches the
grimness of the real stories he conveys here" —The New York
Times
"Inspired by a real school in Florida, The Nickel Boys is a
haunting narrative that reinforces Whitehead's prowess as a leading
voice in American literature." —TIME
"[The Nickel Boys] should further cement Whitehead as one of his
generation's best." —Entertainment Weekly
"Were Whitehead’s only aim to shine an unforgiving light on a
redacted chapter of racial terrorism in the American chronicle,
that would be achievement enough. What he is doing in his new
novel, as in its immediate predecessor, is more challenging than
that. . . . He applies a master storyteller’s muscle. . . . The
elasticity of time in The Nickel Boys feels so organic that only
when you put the book down do you fully appreciate that its sweep
encompasses much of the last century as well as this one. . . . A
writer like Whitehead, who challenges the complacent assumption
that we even fathom what happened in our past, has rarely seemed
more essential.” —The New York Times Book Review
"A masterpiece squared, rooted in history and American mythology
and, yet, painfully topical in its visions of justice and mercy
erratically denied . . . a great American novel." —Maureen
Corrigan, NPR.org
"Whitehead's brilliant examination of America's history of violence
is a stunning novel of impeccable language and startling insight."
—Publishers Weekly, starred review
"Whitehead's magnetic characters exemplify stoicism and courage,
and each supremely craftedscene smolders and flares with injustice
and resistance, building to a staggering revelation. Inspired by an
actual school, Whitehead's potently concentrated drama pinpoints
the brutality and insidiousness of Jim Crow racism with compassion
and protest. . . . A scorching work." —Booklist, starred
review
"[A] stunning new novel. . . . The understated beauty of his
writing, combined with the disquieting subject matter, creates a
kind of dissonance that chills the reader. Whitehead has long had a
gift for crafting unforgettable characters, and Elwood proves to be
one of his best. . . . The final pages of the book are a
heartbreaking distillation of the story that preceded them; it's a
perfect ending to a perfect novel. The Nickel Boys is a beautiful,
wrenching act of witness, a painful remembrance of an 'infinite
brotherhood of broken boys,' and it proves beyond a shadow of a
doubt that Whitehead is one of the most gifted novelists in America
today." —NPR
"Magnificent. . . . Whitehead's prose is meticulous; he nimbly
shifts between the 1960s and present day, creating a fully
fleshed-out picture of violence and (in)justice." —Buzzfeed
"Colson Whitehead's follow-up to The Underground Railroad is
devastating and powerful, a harrowing novelization on another dark
aspect of American history. . . . Never didactic, but always
illuminating—even in those darkest of places in our collective
story—The Nickel Boys is a brilliant, horrifying look into the
legacy of Jim Crow, and the ways in which racism and oppression
don't exist in defiance to the American Dream, but rather as its
fuel." —NYLON
"[The Nickel Boys's] dialogue, the efficient character sketches and
the unobtrusive but always-advancing plot are evidence of mature
ability . . . spry and animated and seamed with dark humor . . .
[with] a dazzling final twist that Mr. Whitehead stages with such
casual skill that one only begins to unpack its meanings well after
the book has ended. . . . The excellence of The Nickel Boys carries
an added feeling of hope because it's evidence of a gradual,
old-fashioned artistic progression that fewer and fewer writers are
allowed the time to pursue. . . . The Nickel Boys demonstrate the
versatile gifts of a writer who is rounding into mastery. The
impression left is that Mr. Whitehead can succeed at any kind of
book he takes on. He has made himself one of the finest novelists
in America." —The Wall Street Journal
"Whitehead's new novel . . . is in many ways a continuation of his
reassessment of African American history. But The Nickel Boys is no
mere sequel . . . it's a surprisingly different kind of novel. . .
. Whitehead reveals the clandestine atrocities of Nickel Academy
with just enough restraint to keep us in a state of wincing dread.
. . . It shreds our easy confidence in the triumph of goodness and
leaves in its place a hard and bitter truth about the ongoing
American experiment." —The Washington Post
"Again [Whitehead is] wrestling with American history's
reverberations. . . . Since its moral concern is multigenerational
anguish, the sense of mourning in The Nickel Boys is
subvisceral—not detached, but restrained. . . . We are called to
remember, 'The past is never dead. It's not even past.'" —O: The
Oprah Magazine
"Possibly the single most anticipated novel of the year." —Los
Angeles Times
"A powerful meditation on suffering and injustice. . . . His
subject could not be more demanding, but Whitehead's writing is
spare and stately. He handles Elwood's and Turner's suffering—and
questions—gently. And he holds the reader carefully. . . . For the
darkest of tales, that is the most a writer can do." —Winnipeg
Free Press
"Whitehead's signature knack for creating unforgettable characters
and spinning compelling stories out of even the darkest places is
on display once again—and while it's not always an easy story to
read, we'd venture to say it's essential." —Town and
Country
"If you thought Colson Whitehead's Pulitzer Prize-winning novel The
Underground Railroad was a tour de force, wait until you get
your hands on The Nickel Boys." —Harper’s Bazaar
"The Nickel Boys is straight-ahead realism, distinguished by its
clarity and its open conversation with other black writers: It
quotes from or evokes the work of Langston Hughes, James Baldwin,
Ralph Ellison and more. Whitehead has made an overt bid to stand in
their company—to write a novel that’s memorable, and teachable, for
years to come. The Nickel Boys is its fulfilment." —USA Today
"The Nickel Boys is a strictly realist work, albeit still ripe with
Whitehead's signature deadpan wit. . . . The heart of The Nickel
Boys is this extended dialogue between Elwood and Turner . . .
[and] often feels like Whitehead’s conversation with both the
idealistic forerunners of the civil rights generation and, by
implication, the woke youth of today. Like perhaps his single
greatest influence, Ralph Ellison, Whitehead negotiates a tightrope
walk between the need to depict the experience of race and racism
and a stubborn individualistic resistance to the claims of
collective identity." —Slate
"[Whitehead's] prose here is elegant yet straightforward . . .
these short sentences spur the action on, creating a pace that's
almost as breath-taking as the novel's depiction of cruelty. . . .
Whitehead's novel is certainly revelatory, but more for the ways in
which it traces these atrocities to the past and present, weaving
tragedy into multiple lifetimes. The Nickel Boys isn't just a
testament to systemic racism; it’s an archaeology of pain." —A.V.
Club
"[The Nickel Boys is] a marvellous play between the real situation
and a novelistic artifice—one which, in the end, proves to be
inherent in the human story. . . . This is a heartbreakingly good
novel. Its excellence doesn't lie in the attitude it takes to a
social problem. . . . Rather, this is a book which should last
because of the elegant refinement of its treatment, and the
harmonious and deeply affecting balance it strikes between
real-life conditions, and the requirements of the finest and most
penetrating art." —The Spectator
"[A] remarkable novel." —Roxane Gay, bestselling author of Bad
Feminist
"A gripping and brilliant novel based on a true story about a boys'
reformatory school in Florida in the 1960s. Whitehead is one of the
most daring and gifted authors writing these days, and I will never
miss one of his books."—Elizabeth Gilbert, author of City of
Girls
"[Whitehead] is a splendidly talented writer, with more range than
any other American novelist currently working—he can be funny,
lyrical, satirical, earnest—whatever is needed by the work."
—George Saunders, author of Lincoln in the Bardo,
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