IMMEDIATE PRESS RELEASE:
Name: Mr. Terence E. Jackson
Book Title: Nigger's Heaven
Genre: Literary - Fiction
ISBN: 0-595-66359-1 Hardcover
0-595-31666-2 Softcover
0-595-76473-8 ebook
Release Date: June
Publisher: iUniverse
Short Book Description:
Nigger's Heaven is the haunting tale of
a disillusioned young
black man who suddenly finds himself, faced with the
realization that sometimes, the road to salvation is not always
as clear as it may seem. The story's protagonist sets out on a
journey, that leads him back to himself as well as into a
kaleidoscope world of denial, self-discovery, and revenge.
The novel clearly opens the door for dialogue on the present
state of today's African-American young males.
Terence E. Jackson has just released
one of this years most controversial and exciting novels. An amazing artist,
who has lived and spent the past twenty years all over the world, Mr. Jackson's
work have been compared to James Baldwin's, due to his sensitivity and
invaluable insight into the human heart.
Artist First Radio Network calls him, "A complex and passionate artist,
who's works immediately discuss the dark and the light of the soul."
Southern Voice Magazine says of his performances, "What I love most about
Terence E. Jackson's work is his desire to approach the truth. To play around
her, to almost catch her, to envision her, so to speak." One of the most
original African-American voices, Mr. Jackson is currently turning the literary
world on its head with the release of his novel "Nigger's Heaven."
All interviews and appearances may be directed to Mr. Jackson via e-mail.
E-mail: tejason@terenceejackson.com
Website: www.terenceejackson.com
Copper Son Production
C/O Terence E. Jackson
690 Durant PL. NE. #2
Atlanta, Georgia 30308
REVIEW
http://www.readincolor.com/id195.html
ADDITIONAL REVIEW
Freelance photographer Valerie
Singleton, finds that sometimes even the written word can have her seeing
double. Here she reviews Terence E. Jackson's controversial new novel
"Nigger's Heaven" and wonders which is closer to the truth, the
camera lens or the pen?
Juan Ramon Jimenez, the Nobel Prize winning poet once said of writing -
"It matters nothing that ideas we enunciate seem wrong for the time and
place. No matter how isolated and abstract they seem to us, they will come into
their meaning, with a huge variety of unsuspecting nuances, when the reader
finds himself in a moral situation analogous to the one in which they were
written."
Every so often, I find myself completely amazed to find myself on a discovery I
had not planned on taking. So was the case a few weeks ago, when I found myself
wandering through a new photo exhibition at a gallery in downtown LA. The show
I thought was good but so are so many others. What made this show now seem
memorable to me? While mingling through the usual artsy crowd, I had the
pleasure of meet a young author - Terence E. Jackson. We both agreed the show
was ok. Later in the evening Mr. Jackson asked if I read books. I told him I
did and he quietly recommended I seek out his new novel. Having read his book
some two weeks ago, I now wished I had read it before meeting him.
Some writer's come along and upon discovering them you ask yourself "Where
have they been my whole life." Mr. Jackson is one of those writers. Just
as there are books you read and forget. There are those that seem to haunt your
very being. I must admit, when I went to purchase my copy of the novel, I was a
bit nervous, being a white woman asking for a book titled "Nigger's
Heaven?" I had to wonder if this was the author's way of getting people to
talk about his book? Once you read the novel you come to understand that it
could not have been titled anything else. I also learned that the term
"nigger's heaven" is what was referred to as the public colored
sections during the days of slavery and segregation. Be warned though,
"Nigger's Heaven is a very dark, bizarre book. Don't worry though, part of
the books allure lay in its strange tale. Basically, the author takes the idea
of the biblical annunciation and turns it on its head. Instead of Mary and the
announcement of the coming immaculate birth, the author imagines a young
African American man who receives news that he has been chosen to help cleanse
the world of evil.
One of the amazing things about the
book is the author's ability to immediately throw us into the mind of his main
character. Dealing with a kaleidoscope of themes, large as the Diaspora
herself: Denial, self-hatred, revenge, one might think the author would lose
focus. On the contrary, this sort of juggling act seems to add an intensity
that goes straight to one's psyche. Having infused the main character of the novel
with just the right amount of pathos, the reader is torn between wanting to
dislike him and feeling a need to defend his actions. Mr. Jackson writes with
such lyricism that the beauty of his prose is never lost on the heart as well
as the eyes.
Music also plays a very large part in this story and one can almost hear the
melody flowing through the pages. Written in the first person, the author uses
wonderful shifting perceptions to keep us wondering if what we are reading is
really happening or just a figment of the main character's imagination. While
reading the book I couldn't help but think of the DC sniper as well as what
role society plays in the creation of someone like that?
Terence E. Jackson's novel "Nigger's Heaven" was published in June by
iUniverse and can be purchased at any book seller near you or at online
bookstores.
Valerie Singleton is a photographer currently residing in Los Angeles,
California.
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