Adam Mansbach was born in 1976. He is the founding editor of the hip hop journal Elementary, and currently serves as an Artistic Consultant to Columbia University’s Center for Jazz Studies. He is the author of the acclaimed poetry collection genius b-boy cynics getting weeded in the garden of delights, and a former drum technician for the Elvin Jones Jazz Machine. An MC and performer who collaborates with both jazz and hip hop musicians, he lives in Fort Greene, Brooklyn. His next novel follows three generations of a Jewish family.
“A rushing torrent of swirling, coruscating language, jumpy with
jazz-influenced rhythms and shimmering with tumbling shards of
urban imagery.” –The Boston Globe
“[Mansbach is] a veritable multi-culti code-switching genius. . . .
The novel forges ahead to a powerfully humble conclusion that
testifies to the authentic impulses behind creation.” –The San
Francisco Bay Guardian
“This might be the best fictional work about jazz since James
Baldwin’s beautiful and soulful Sonny’s Blues.” –Library
Journal
“Pulls you into passages so rhythmic that for the first few pages
you want to stop the meaning from leaking through. You want only to
say the words out loud, hear the syllables roll off your lips.”
–Boston Magazine
“Mansbach displays a gift for fusing the improvised energy of
streetspeak with that of spiraling jazz riffs.” –The New York Times
Book Review
“Mansbach convincingly captures the rhythms and cadences of black
language and the inner monologues that play out while artists are
on stage. . . . The questions that [Shackling Water’s] authorship
raises–does this white boy know what he’s talking about? –are
forgotten.” –The Washington Post
“Mansbach plays with words like a rapper, themes like a jazz
musician and rhythm like a hip hop dancer. Some of the most
original and moving writing out there.” –Boston Herald
“Mansbach illuminates music's spiritual dimension and plumbs the
sorrow and rage that is the legacy of every black artist. [A] bold,
resonant, portrait of the artist as a young man. . . . Mansbach's
eloquence and energy are unwavering and his music is divine.”
–Booklist (starred)
“A literary debut of breathtaking splendor. Mansbach riffs like
Coltrane, flows like Biggie Smalls, and heats the page with prose
that might have spilled forth had Whitman learned the blues. . . .
A true artistic gem.” –Michael Eric Dyson, author of Holler If You
Hear Me: Searching for Tupac Shakur
“A stunningly beautiful, heart-aching debut . . . a brilliantly
written, risk-taking novel that lands gracefully on its feet. . . .
Shackling Water may be the finest novel written this year and half
of the next one.” –African-American Literature Book Club
“Mansbach sparkles throughout. As auspicious a debut as Colson
Whitehead's The Intuitionist . . . even those who don't know a
whole note from a grace note will revel in glorious song and
history both.” –Kirkus Reviews (starred)
“A passionate debut . . . this promising novel augers well for
Mansbach’s future.” –Publishers Weekly
“Language that moves with all the grace and unpredictability of a
thrilling solo.” –Jazziz
A talented African-American saxophonist moves from Boston to Harlem to study with the jazz master he idolizes in Mansbach's first novel, a passionate debut that succeeds despite an abundance of plot cliches. Latif Pearson, the young protagonist, gets hooked on the sounds of Albert Van Horn; after years of building his chops, 19-year-old Latif gets up the nerve to make the move to New York, where he spends his nights watching Van Horn play from the sidelines. The dark side of Latif's debut comes when he takes a job running drugs for the local dealer, but he is able to make it work as he adds a relationship to the mix, falling in love with a beautiful white painter named Mona. The ambitious, precocious Latif idolizes Van Horn, but when the older musician finally invites him to some private jam sessions and then onstage, Latif puts so much pressure on himself that he implodes and succumbs to the lures of heroin. Mansbach gets past the hoary plot cliches with some strong characterizations, although his prose waxes purple when he writes about the music and Latif's street life: `The horn dipped and bobbed above the amniotic ocean... vanishing inside the grave of Icarus only to reanimate ichthyoid." Setting aside these flaws, both hardcore and would-be jazz fans will find plenty of meat on the bones of Mansbach's debut; with a more innovative plot, it might have been a truly memorable book. Agent, Richard R. Abate. (Mar.) Forecast: Though a bit dated in theme and likely to appeal mostly to New York readers, this promising novel augurs well for Mansbach's future. Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
"A rushing torrent of swirling, coruscating language, jumpy with
jazz-influenced rhythms and shimmering with tumbling shards of
urban imagery." -The Boston Globe
"[Mansbach is] a veritable multi-culti code-switching genius. . . .
The novel forges ahead to a powerfully humble conclusion that
testifies to the authentic impulses behind creation." -The San
Francisco Bay Guardian
"This might be the best fictional work about jazz since James
Baldwin's beautiful and soulful Sonny's Blues." -Library
Journal
"Pulls you into passages so rhythmic that for the first few pages
you want to stop the meaning from leaking through. You want only to
say the words out loud, hear the syllables roll off your lips."
-Boston Magazine
"Mansbach displays a gift for fusing the improvised energy
of streetspeak with that of spiraling jazz riffs." -The New York
Times Book Review
"Mansbach convincingly captures the rhythms and cadences of black
language and the inner monologues that play out while artists are
on stage. . . . The questions that [Shackling Water's]
authorship raises-does this white boy know what he's talking about?
-are forgotten." -The Washington Post
"Mansbach plays with words like a rapper, themes like a jazz
musician and rhythm like a hip hop dancer. Some of the most
original and moving writing out there." -Boston Herald
"Mansbach illuminates music's spiritual dimension and
plumbs the sorrow and rage that is the legacy of every black
artist. [A] bold, resonant, portrait of the artist as a young man.
. . . Mansbach's eloquence and energy are unwavering and his music
is divine." -Booklist (starred)
"A literary debut of breathtaking splendor. Mansbach riffs like
Coltrane, flows like Biggie Smalls, and heats the page with prose
that might have spilled forth had Whitman learned the blues. . . .
A true artistic gem." -Michael Eric Dyson, author of
Holler If You Hear Me: Searching for Tupac Shakur
"A stunningly beautiful, heart-aching debut . . . a brilliantly
written, risk-taking novel that lands gracefully on its feet. . . .
Shackling Water may be the finest novel written this year
and half of the next one." -African-American Literature Book
Club
"Mansbach sparkles throughout. As auspicious a debut as Colson
Whitehead's The Intuitionist . . . even those who don't know
a whole note from a grace note will revel in glorious song and
history both." -Kirkus Reviews (starred)
"A passionate debut . . . this promising novel augers well for
Mansbach's future." -Publishers Weekly
"Language that moves with all the grace and
unpredictability of a thrilling solo." -Jazziz
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