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What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day (Oprah's Book Club) by Pearl Cleage
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Pearl Cleage Edition: Paperback Audio: English (Unknown); English (Original Language); English (Published) Published: 1998-11-01 ISBN: 038079487X Number of pages: 256 Publisher: Harper Paperbacks
Book Reviews of What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day (Oprah's Book Club)Book Review: AN OUTSTANDING NOVEL!! Summary: 5 Stars
"Sometimes you have to meet yourself on the road before you have a chance to learn the appropriate greeting. . . All you have to do is say yes." Pearl Cleage's debut novel, What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day, introduces the reader to the world of the 90's filled with abuse, teen pregnancy, and even HIV, the virus that causes AIDS. Cleage's main character Ava Johnson must accomplish many of her own goals before she will find out who she is and what she wants out of life. She must overcome many fears while living in Michigan, including the fear of falling in love. What Ava believes is the end of living in Michigan is only the beginning of her life there. Pearl Cleage's background plays an important role in the setting of her novel. When she was two years old, her family moved to Detroit, Michigan where she grew up. She graduated from high school and left Michigan to pursue a degree in playwrighting. Three years later she moved to Atlanta, Georgia to finish her studies. Cleage's main character Ava Johnson has a similar background in the novel. Many things in her personal life inspired her to write such a moving novel as this. For example, her recent marriage inspired her to write a love story. Also, she felt that many of her heterosexual friends are in denial about the reality of AIDS and the danger that it presents. By writing a novel dealing with AIDS, she thought she could better inform the African American population and support those who are infected. Her novel portrays a main character with AIDS who develops ways to adapt to changes in her life. Pearl Cleage uses various elements of style to create an entertaining, well-written novel about the problems of a modern African American society. For example, Cleage uses the main character with common narration to tell the story. All of the characters speak with a common dialogue, too. Cleage writes to make the novel understandable to any reader. Cleage's novel also flows fluently from one though to the next thought. The author also includes colorful images and details. For example, Cleage writes "He was standing on the dock in a pair of pajama pants and no shirt, moving slowly from one position to another. . ." These images create a mental picture in the mind of the reader. The author also uses average length, simple sentences to convey the thoughts and actions of the characters. Cleage's realistic view in the subject of AIDS and its effects on others completely transforms this work from a story to a masterpiece. Cleage captures the feelings of Ava on AIDS and how scary it can seem to the person infected with the virus. Ava feels as if she has no one to turn to and that she can be of little help to anyone else. Also this situation has a large effect on Eddie and their relationship. He doesn't know how he can help her and if he wants to risk his liffe to get close to someone that is unsure of her life. Something tells him to reach out and help her yet he doesn't to offend her sense of capability. This work excells because of the realistic setting and storyline. The plot makes the reader aware of the effects of such a devastating illness, yet keeps the reader entertained throught Cleage's witty humor. On the other hand, the greatest weakness of this novels is the constant reminder that unless and until there is a cure for AIDS, the novel won't contain a truly happy ending. Pearl Cleage's novel has made me aware of the effects of AIDS and that no one is safe unless he or she is aware of the specifics of the virus. Pearl Cleage's novel What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day excellently displays the trials and tribulations of an HIV-infected woman in today's society. She has to adapt to many changes in her life including learning how to love. Even with her own personal problems she assists young teenage mothers with the facts of life and many other questionable problems. This true heroine creates an entertaining yet heart-warming story for any adult reader.
Summary of What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day (Oprah's Book Club)In a remarkable debut novel that sizzles with sensuality, crackles with life-affirming energy and moves the reader to laughter and tears, author Pearl Cleage creates a world rich in character, human drama, and deep, compassionate understanding. After a decade of luxe living in Atlanta, Ava Johnson has returned to tiny Idlewild, Michigan -- her fabulous career and power plans smashed to bits on one dark truth: Ava has tested positive for HIV. Bur rather than a sorrowful end, her homecoming is a new beginning. Because, in the ten-plus years since she left, all the problems of the big city have invaded the sleepy community of her childhood. Because dear friends and family sorely need her help in the face of impending trouble and tragedy, and Ava cannot turn her back on them. And because, most importantly, Ava Johnson is inexplicabley and undeniably falling in love. Oprah Book ClubŪ Selection, September 1998: What makes Pearl Cleage's novel so damned enjoyable? At first glance, after all, What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary Day seems pretty heavy going: HIV, suicide, sudden infant death syndrome, and drunk driving all figure prominently in the lives of narrator Ava Johnson and her older sister Joyce. It isn't long before crack addiction, domestic violence, and unwed motherhood have joined the list--so, where's the pleasure? The answer lies in the sharp and funny attitude Cleage brings to her depiction of one African American community in the troubled '90s. Ava Johnson, for example, might be HIV-positive, but she's refreshingly forthright about it: "Most of us got it from the boys. Which is, when you think about it, a pretty good argument for cutting men loose, but if I could work up a strong physical reaction to women, I would already be having sex with them. I'm not knocking it. I'm just saying I can't be a witness. Too many titties in one place to suit me." Ada has spent the last 10 years living in Atlanta. When she discovers she's infected, she sells her hairdressing business and heads back to her childhood home of Idlewild, Michigan, to spend the summer with her recently widowed sister before moving on to San Francisco. Once there, however, she finds herself embroiled in big-city problems--drugs, violence, teen pregnancy, and an abandoned crack-addicted baby, to name just a few--in a small-town setting. Ava also meets Eddie Jefferson, a man with a past who just might change her mind about the imprudence of falling in love. In less assured hands, such a catalog of disasters would make for maudlin, melodramatic reading indeed. But Cleage, an accomplished playwright, has a way both with characters and with language that lifts this tale above its movie-of-the-week tendencies. In Ava she has created a character who not only effortlessly carries the weight of the story but also provides entertaining commentary on African American life as she goes. Discussing the insular nature of the black community in Atlanta, she recalls, "I'd walk into a reception room and there'd be a room full of brothers, power-brokering their asses off, and I'd realize I'd seen them all naked. I'd watch them striding around, talking to each other in those phony-ass voices men use when they want to make it clear they got juice, and it was so depressing, all I'd want to do was go home and get drunk." Later, she describes the preacher's wife's hair as "pressed and hot-curled within an inch of its life.... Hardly anybody asks for that kind of hard press anymore. Sister seems to have missed the moment when we decided it was okay for the hair to move." As the trials and tribulations pile on, the experiences of Cleage's characters prove to be universal: death, love, second chances. Ava's acerbic, smart-mouthed narrative keeps the story buoyant; by the time this endearingly imperfect heroine and her cohorts have negotiated the rocky road to a happy ending, readers will be sorry to see her go, even as they wish her well. --Alix Wilber
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