Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
Novelist Morris (Motor City), a staff writer at The Millions, delivers a poignant biography of his grandfather, John Morris, a University of Georgia philologist. Though Morris touches on the technological and political upheavals of his grandfather's lifetime, he pays the greatest attention to racial issues, noting that John was born on a Virginia plantation in 1863 and died in 1955, the same year Emmett Till was murdered. While some of his peers in Virginia and Georgia dove into Lost Cause fanaticism, John saw slavery as evil and once drove his daughter to a farmhouse where a Black man had been lynched because "he wanted her to know about and think about and never forget." Elsewhere, Morris discusses John's support for women's suffrage and surmises that he sympathized with striking laborers. Though Morris does an admirable job contextualizing his grandfather's life, he often veers into speculation, as when he imagines that John would have seen nationwide racial violence during the Red Summer of 1919 as "a perverse vindication of his decision to remain in the South." Still, this is an immersive and moving portrait of a quietly decent man and his monumental era. (Apr.)
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The history of a century through the eyes of an ordinary man who lived through it. Journalist Morris holds a low opinion of recent decades. "The difference between a buggy and a jet," he writes, "is far greater than the difference between the rotary phones I grew up using and the smart phone I use today." He maintains that the true miracle century was 1870-1970, and he makes a convincing case through the biography of his grandfather John Morris (1863-1955). His imaginative "mongrel" approach--"a mix of…biography, history, reportage, memoir, autobiography, and, when the record runs thin, speculation that flirts with fiction"--is successful. John was born into a slave-owning Virginia family. The end of the Civil War led to the departure of most of the plantation workers, so his father took a job as professor of English at the University of Georgia. Son John entered college in 1879 and proved an avid scholar while Thomas Edison and others were launching "the golden age of the independent American inventor." John, an obsessive newspaper reader, undoubtedly soaked up these developments. After graduation, he drifted before deciding to attend the University of Berlin, where he discovered his life's work: philology. His career as a professor writing scholarly articles for obscure journals does not seem like material for a page-turner, but his modest life, in contrast with the turbulent outside world, makes for an engaging read. Throughout his life, the South was afflicted with virulent racism, lynchings, and the KKK. Though John supported Black rights, he wondered if a "White man in the South [could]…help Blacks rise?" The author cuts away regularly to recount other historical elements that were prominent in his grandfather's life: electric light, flush toilets, the creation of modern medicine, radio, movies, TV, automobiles, two world wars, and the atomic bomb. Though the author offers few novel insights, he does a superb job of recounting a life amid a series of significant decades. An entertaining combination of domestic and world history. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.