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SOME THINGS I NEVER THOUGHT I'D
DO

A Novel By Pearl Cleage
One World/Ballantine Books: 274
pp., $23.95


Reconnecting With the South
and Some Real-Life Characters

By Paula L. Woods, December 31, 2003, Los Angeles Times

NOTED playwright and essayist Pearl Cleage has a body of
work distinguished by its seamless blending of women's
intimate stories and broader political issues. Her most
popular plays, "Flyin' West" and "Blues for an Alabama Sky,"
concern historical black women whose personal circumstances
and dilemmas reflect and inform larger societal issues of
slavery and racism. For her fans, however, the greatest
drawback to Cleage's stage work has been that the emotional
bonds formed with her characters end when the curtain comes
down.
Cleage has solved that with her fiction, in which she spins
tales of a group of loosely connected, contemporary black
women still struggling with the personal and political. Her
first novel, 1998's "What Looks Like Crazy on an Ordinary
Day," exposed a broad cross section of readers to the black
residents of Idlewild, Mich., and protagonist Ava Johnson, a
socially conscious Atlanta transplant contending with her
HIV-positive diagnosis, church corruption, a second chance
at love and the Sewing Circus, a multigenerational group of
women dedicated to sex education and consciousness- raising.
Her second novel, "I Wish I Had a Red Dress," revolves
around Ava's widowed sister Joyce, who must balance her
challenging job as a social worker with the Sewing Circus,
the shedding of her mourning clothes and her gradual
reawakening to love.
"Some Things I Never Thought I'd Do," her latest novel, is a
tale of a woman's struggle to overcome the ravages of drug
addiction. Protagonist Regina "Gina" Burns, a 34-year-old
former "stomp-down dope fiend," has emerged from rehab only
to find her house in foreclosure. To save it, she must take
a consulting assignment with popular motivational speaker
and activist Beth Davis, her former employer for 10 years
and her almost mother-in-law.
The job is fraught with personal risk because Beth rejected
Gina as a wife for her beloved only child, Son, which sent
her spiraling into cocaine and her current dilemma. But Beth
has presented a tempting offer: enough money to bring Gina's
mortgage current and the opportunity to shape the Legacy
Project, a tribute to Son's life and work as founder of a
powerful black men's movement. Gina eagerly accepts, not
only because of her friendship with Son, who was lost in the
World Trade Center attack on Sept. 11, 2001, but more
importantly, because "I'm not going to greet my mama in
paradise and tell her I snorted up her mama's house because
I wanted a man who didn't want me."
To do the job, Gina must return to Atlanta, headquarters for
Beth's Son Rise Enterprises and home to Morehouse College,
Son's alma mater and holder of his personal papers. Gina is
both intrigued and troubled by her aunt Abbie's vision that
she will not only complete a task for a fallen friend on the
trip but also rescue a damsel in distress and be united with
a man who "has the ocean in his eyes" and who has been
searching for his true love across time. "How many black
people do you know with blue eyes?" Gina wails.
In Atlanta, Gina finds an idyllic enclave in the
crime-riddled West End, a place where women can walk the
streets without worry and elders tend community gardens on
the site of burned-down crack houses. The force behind this
haven is her landlord, Blue Hamilton, an "Africa dark,"
blue-eyed former soul singer whose enforcement methods
involve his godfather-like persona, "conversations" with
drug dealers and other miscreants and, Gina suspects, much
worse. There is also the malevolent force of picture-perfect
Beth, a woman Gina regards as being "like a lot of
charismatic people ... better appreciated from a distance."
Despite Beth's grief over Son, she is consumed with
parlaying her large, newly registered base of fans into a
run for governor, even if it means stepping over Precious
Hargrove, a hard-working West End state senator. In her
relentless quest for political power, Beth is willing to say
or do anything, even deny the legacy of her secretive son
and deal with the evil thugs Blue has tried to keep at bay.
For all its sociological and political overtones, "Some
Things" is a playful, joy-filled novel, shot with the humor
that distinguished Cleage's earlier fiction and her obvious
love of black people and culture. An array of well-drawn
secondary characters balances the heavier action, including
Aretha, daughter and niece of protagonists in the earlier
novels. Cleage also clearly adores Atlanta, which she re-
creates in loving detail, providing insights into the city's
historic nightspots, vibrant neighborhoods and restaurants,
including the real-life Youngblood's R&B Cafe, where
Cleage's descriptions of the Gene Chandler T-bone steak or
the Mary Wells fillet of salmon may tempt readers to book
Delta's next flight.
The book has its flaws -- an overreliance on italics and the
too- sparing use of a secondary character in the early
chapters who figures prominently in the revelation of Son's
secret life. Troubling too is Gina's romance with the
morally ambiguous Blue, a complex, compassionate man who
feels compelled to step outside the law to make his
neighborhood safe. "What price was I prepared to pay for
that safety?" Gina wonders at one point. The question will
resonate with anyone struggling to live in a community beset
by crime. But there are enough issues left open to raise
hope for a sequel to resolve them and give us more of these
engaging, life-loving characters. |