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Incognegro: Renaissance

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
A page-turning thriller of racial divide, Incognegro: Renaissance explores segregation, secrets and self-image as our race-bending protagonist penetrates a world where he feels stranger than ever before.
When a black writer is found dead at a scandalous interracial party in 1920s' New York, Harlem's cub reporter Zane Pinchback is the only one determined to solve the murder. Zane must go "Incognegro" for the first time, using his light appearance to pass as a white man to find the true killer, in this prequel miniseries to the critically acclaimed Vertigo graphic novel, now available in a special new 10th Anniversary Edition.
With a cryptic manuscript as his only clue, and a mysterious and beautiful woman as the murder's only witness, Zane finds himself on the hunt through the dark and dangerous streets of "roaring twenties" Harlem in search for justice. In a time when looks could kill . . . Zane's skin is the only thing keeping him alive.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      February 4, 2008
      The brows are furrowed and teeth mightily clenched in Pleece\x92s noirish artwork for Johnson\x92s pulpy tale of a black journalist who goes undercover in the 1930s South to investigate a possible trumped-up murder charge against his brother\x97a charge that could lead to a lynching. Zane Pinchback, who is so light-skinned he can pass for white with a little cosmetic help, writes the \x93Incognegro\x94 column for a Harlem newspaper, and his beat (like that of many a brave black journalist at the time) is the bloody circus of lynchings still claiming lives in horrendous numbers. Johnson\x92s tale is a smart and fast-paced one, particularly when dealing with Pinchback\x92s reluctance to return to Mississippi (wisely preferring his comparatively sheltered Harlem life). Once he\x92s back down South, the twists and turns of the story come fast and thick, goosed by the not particularly trustworthy explanations being given by Zane\x92s moonshine-distilling brother, and the attention-drawing antics of Zane\x92s playboy friend Carl, who invited himself along on a lark. Johnson and Pleece have done a mostly commendable job, though the plot gets too knotted for its own good long before the conclusion, but they give a cracking Chester Himes kick to what could have been a sub\x96Walter Mosley imitation.

    • Library Journal

      November 1, 2018

      New Holland Herald cub reporter Zane Pinchback gets the scoop of his life when a gay writer ends up dead at an interracial soir{amp}eacute;e. To investigate, he learns to pass as white but finds that the suspects aren't who they seem either. Set during the Harlem Renaissance, this story features tight plotting, zinger dialog, and dead-on social commentary for adults and teens. (See also Incognegro: A Graphic Mystery, Xpress Reviews 2/9/18.)

      Copyright 2018 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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