DR. KING'S REFRIGERATOR AND OTHER BEDTIME STORIES

By Charles Johnson
Scribner, 126 Pages, $20.00

A SINGLE DESTINY

By Paula L. Woods, Los Angeles Times, February 27,
2005

With a National Book Award, MacArthur Fellowship and
Writers Guild Award for screenwriting to his credit, Charles
Johnson is among the most-lauded writers in America. The
American Academy of Arts and Letters gave him its
prestigious award in 2002, praising his short stories for
ingeniously braiding "history, philosophy, and imagination
in making postmodern fiction of the highest order."The
eight stories comprising "Dr. King's Refrigerator,"
Johnson's third collection of short fiction, combine these
interests in unexpected and challenging ways. While some of
the stories could rightly be called modern fairy tales or
speculative fiction, the book also has deeper intentions,
both moral and philosophical. This underlying tension drives
several stories, most notably "The Gift of the Osuo," which
features Shabaka, an aged 17th century Allmuseri king, who
sees a chance to change his life with one stroke of a
magically endowed piece of charcoal. The charcoal is a gift
from two arguing sorcerers who had demanded that the
befuddled king solve the duality first posited by René
Descartes in his famous statement: Cogito ergo sum.
(I think, therefore I am.) Shabaka's shallow resolution of
the mind-over-matter conundrum and his impulsive use of the
enchanted chalk sets in motion a nightmarish chain of events
that weaves together the Cartesian dilemma, African history
and more.
The title story is a humorous, richly human tale about a
young Martin Luther King Jr. Unable to write his weekly
sermon, he raids the refrigerator and finds in the Hawaiian
pineapple, Mexican tortillas and German sauerkraut the
metaphors that will inform his 1963 "Letter From Birmingham
Jail" as well as his lifelong quest for social justice. "[H]e
saw in each succulent fruit, each slice of bread, and each
grain of rice a fragile, inescapable network of mutuality in
which all earthly creatures were codependent, integrated,
and tied in a single garment of destiny."
Yet the story that lingers in the mind longest may well
be "Executive Decision," possibly the first published story
on affirmative action. It is much more than that. The author
uses a once-liberal CEO's difficulty in choosing a black man
or a white woman for a key job in his family-run company as
a way to explore personal preference, Emmanuel Kant, the
individual's obligations to redress social wrongs and
Harvard professor John Rawls' theory that "when justice is
seen as fairness, men of unequal circumstances agree to
share one another's fate." One wishes this landmark story
were required reading for every corporate, governmental or
nonprofit leader struggling over how to make our workplaces
more inclusive.
Although "Dr. King's Refrigerator" has a few flaws — some
stories become didactic, others could make their points more
forcefully — they are minor in a collection that is more
inventive than invective, more philosophical than puerile.
At a time when challenging short fiction, especially by
African Americans, seems harder and harder to find, that's
more than enough to warrant placing "Dr. King's
Refrigerator" on the must-read list.
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