Vivid, unpredictable, insinuating, uncomfortably intimate, the voice that tells Invisible Man is one of the most supple and powerful instruments ever fashioned in American prose. His skin is black, his soul is blue, his mind is lit with both desperation and deep thought. Naturalistic and surreal, fantastic and fatally true to the African American experience, Invisible Man follows its hero from his early days in the Deep South to a college campus, from employment at Liberty Paints in New York City to engagement with a progressive political organization known as the Brotherhood.
I liked this book more and more as I got into it. A very good look at the difference one man can make.
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