Current:Home > ScamsWriter Percival Everett: "In ownership of language there resides great power" -WealthX
Writer Percival Everett: "In ownership of language there resides great power"
View
Date:2025-04-17 03:03:11
Who, besides Percival Everett, would have a pet crow named Jim Crow? "When he was on my shoulder, when I wrote the novel 'Erasure,' if I wasn't paying enough attention to him, he would march down my arm and peck at the keys," Everett said. "So, I do credit him for having written some of the novel."
Consider the irony (one of Everett's favorite literary devices) that "Jim Crow" helped him write a book about race – a novel-within-a novel satirizing publishing industry complicity in perpetuating stereotypes of Black America. "Erasure," published in 2001, has been turned into the Oscar-winning film, "American Fiction," starring Jeffrey Wright.
Another irony: The film he had nothing to do with (but likes) has given Percival Everett more visibility than the 30+ books he's written, or the fact that he's been shortlisted for the Booker Prize, and a finalist for a Pulitzer.
Everett's books are often perversely funny. Imagine a funny novel about lynching ("The Trees," from 2021), written in the form of a police procedural. Funny, until it isn't. "Humor is interesting," he said, " because if I can disarm a reader with humor, then I can address serious stuff."
Everett's latest novel, "James," is a re-telling of Mark Tain's "The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn," from the point-of-view of Huck's enslaved friend, Jim. In it, language is a running joke, but also dangerous.
The enslaved people, Jim in particular, speak in what would commonly be called standard English. But they slip into dialect when they're around White people.
"Papa, why do we have to learn this?"
"White folks expect us to sound a certain way, and it can only help if we don't disappoint them," I said. "The only ones who suffer when they are made to feel inferior is us."
In "James," a man is lynched for stealing a pencil so Jim can write his story.
"In language, and in ownership of language, there resides great power, and resides an avenue to any kind of freedom that we're going to have," Everett said.
He uses words considered "not politically correct," such as the N-word. "'Cause I'm telling the truth," Everett said. "You know, if somebody came in here right now and said, Hey you, N-word, am I gonna be less offended than if they use the word n*****? No. That focus on the word misses the point. I don't care about the word. I care about the intention. I care about the meaning. I'm not impressed with attempts to cover up anything."
Everett, the son of a dentist, grew up in Columbia, South Carolina. He's from a long line of physicians – and says the only thing he knew growing up was that he didn't want to be a doctor.
Why? "They had to be around people all the time!" he explained.
He discovered he does like being around animals ("I've never had an animal lie to me!"). On the way to becoming a prolific writer, and a distinguished professor of writing at the University of Southern California, Everett trained horses, and even mules.
He is intensely private, protective of his home and family, and only shows up for book events when he has to. He would rather be fly-fishing. He ties his own ties. "I like small streams, so I fish with very small flies," he said. "It frees me to think."
He also paints. A solo show, his fourth, opens in Los Angeles next month, his vocabulary as abstract as his writing is explicit.
He said, "Working with stories is internal and sedentary. I love the physicality of making the paintings. I don't consider them differently. I consider them as things I do to explain to myself my place in the world."
And where does race figure into Percival Everett's worldview, given that his books confront it? "Do I think about race? No, but it's there. Sadness? Sure. Why not? What's had to be sadness. The reality, yeah, do I really care? No. I can't change this cultural tsunami that happened 400 years ago, and the waters of it are still waiting to recede."
And writing his books doesn't take steps in that direction? "One hopes!" he laughed. "I just do what I can, and move on."
WEB EXTRA: Percival Everett: Those who ban books are "small and frightened people" (YouTube Video)
Read an excerpt: "James" by Percival Everett
Read an excerpt: "Dr. No" by Percival Everett
For more info:
- "James" by Percival Everett (Doubleday), in Hardcover, Large Print Trade Paperback, eBook and Audio formats, available via Amazon, Barnes & Noble and Bookshop.org
- USC Dornsife College of Letters Arts and Sciences
- Thanks to Vroman's Bookstore, Pasadena, Calif.
- Percival Everett at Show Gallery, Los Angeles
Story produced by Amol Mhatre. Editor: Chad Cardin.
Martha Teichner has been a correspondent for "CBS News Sunday Morning" since December 1993, where she's equally adept at covering major national and international breaking news stories as she is handling in-depth cultural and arts topics.
veryGood! (45638)
Related
- Global Warming Set the Stage for Los Angeles Fires
- Scientists Track a Banned Climate Pollutant’s Mysterious Rise to East China
- Weaponizing the American flag as a tool of hate
- Jessie J Gives Birth, Welcomes Baby Boy Over One Year After Miscarriage
- Selena Gomez engaged to Benny Blanco after 1 year together: 'Forever begins now'
- Solar Industry to Make Pleas to Save Key Federal Subsidy as It Slips Away
- A new flu is spilling over from cows to people in the U.S. How worried should we be?
- Fight Over Fossil Fuel Influence in Climate Talks Ends With Murky Compromise
- Why Sean "Diddy" Combs Is Being Given a Laptop in Jail Amid Witness Intimidation Fears
- Jamie Lynn Spears Shares Big Update About Zoey 102: Release Date, Cast and More
Ranking
- Romantasy reigns on spicy BookTok: Recommendations from the internet’s favorite genre
- Fearing More Pipeline Spills, 114 Groups Demand Halt to Ohio Gas Project
- Vanderpump Rules' James Kennedy Addresses Near-Physical Reunion Fight With Tom Sandoval
- Ignoring Scientists’ Advice, Trump’s EPA Rejects Stricter Air Quality Standard
- Trump invites nearly all federal workers to quit now, get paid through September
- Fearing More Pipeline Spills, 114 Groups Demand Halt to Ohio Gas Project
- Some Mexican pharmacies sell pills laced with deadly fentanyl to U.S. travelers
- Q&A: Denis Hayes, Planner of the First Earth Day, Discusses the ‘Virtual’ 50th
Recommendation
Woman dies after Singapore family of 3 gets into accident in Taiwan
Blinken arrives in Beijing amid major diplomatic tensions with China
WHO calls on China to share data on raccoon dog link to pandemic. Here's what we know
Weaponizing the American flag as a tool of hate
North Carolina justices rule for restaurants in COVID
How law enforcement is promoting a troubling documentary about 'sextortion'
A rehab center revives traumatized Ukrainian troops before their return to battle
The potentially deadly Candida auris fungus is spreading quickly in the U.S.