Family
Love
Coming of Age
Drug Addiction
Race
Absent Father
Loyal Friend
Family Secrets
Haunted Protagonist
Haunted Past
Wise Old Mentor
Intergenerational Trauma
Family Drama
Haunted House
Search for Identity
Supernatural Elements
Grief & Loss
Supernatural
Racism & Discrimination
Ghosts & the Supernatural
About this ebook
A finalist for the Kirkus Prize, Andrew Carnegie Medal, Aspen Words Literary Prize, and a New York Times bestseller, this majestic, stirring, and widely praised novel from two-time National Book Award winner Jesmyn Ward, the story of a family on a journey through rural Mississippi, is a “tour de force” (O, The Oprah Magazine) and a timeless work of fiction that is destined to become a classic.
Jesmyn Ward’s historic second National Book Award–winner is “perfectly poised for the moment” (The New York Times), an intimate portrait of three generations of a family and an epic tale of hope and struggle. “Ward’s writing throbs with life, grief, and love… this book is the kind that makes you ache to return to it” (Buzzfeed).
Jojo is thirteen years old and trying to understand what it means to be a man. He doesn’t lack in fathers to study, chief among them his Black grandfather, Pop. But there are other men who complicate his understanding: his absent White father, Michael, who is being released from prison; his absent White grandfather, Big Joseph, who won’t acknowledge his existence; and the memories of his dead uncle, Given, who died as a teenager.
His mother, Leonie, is an inconsistent presence in his and his toddler sister’s lives. She is an imperfect mother in constant conflict with herself and those around her. She is Black and her children’s father is White. She wants to be a better mother but can’t put her children above her own needs, especially her drug use. Simultaneously tormented and comforted by visions of her dead brother, which only come to her when she’s high, Leonie is embattled in ways that reflect the brutal reality of her circumstances.
When the children’s father is released from prison, Leonie packs her kids and a friend into her car and drives north to the heart of Mississippi and Parchman Farm, the State Penitentiary. At Parchman, there is another thirteen-year-old boy, the ghost of a dead inmate who carries all of the ugly history of the South with him in his wandering. He too has something to teach Jojo about fathers and sons, about legacies, about violence, about love.
Rich with Ward’s distinctive, lyrical language, Sing, Unburied, Sing is a majestic and unforgettable family story and “an odyssey through rural Mississippi’s past and present” (The Philadelphia Inquirer).
Editor's Note
Beauty that lingers…
This winner of the 2017 National Book Award draws on Morrison, Faulkner, and Greek myths to play with the classic American road novel, weaving magical realism into the modern, rural South. Sentences rise together to form a penetrating story that lingers like fog on the Mississippi bayou where the novel is set.
Jesmyn Ward
JESMYN WARD received her MFA from the University of Michigan and is currently a professor of creative writing at Tulane University. She is the author of the novels Where the Line Bleeds and Salvage the Bones, which won the 2011 National Book Award, and Sing, Unburied, Sing, which won the 2017 National Book Award. She is also the editor of the anthology The Fire This Time and the author of the memoir Men We Reaped, which was a finalist for the National Book Critics Circle Award. From 2008 to 2010, Ward had a Stegner Fellowship at Stanford University. She was the John and Renée Grisham Writer in Residence at the University of Mississippi for the 2010–2011 academic year. In 2016, the American Academy of Arts and Letters selected Ward for the Strauss Living Award. She lives in Mississippi.
Read more from Jesmyn Ward
Salvage the Bones: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Let Us Descend: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Men We Reaped: A Memoir Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5As I Lay Dying Rating: 0 out of 5 stars0 ratingsWhere the Line Bleeds: A Novel Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5The Fire This Time: A New Generation Speaks about Race Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Fight of the Century: Writers Reflect on 100 Years of Landmark ACLU Cases Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Bloodchild and Other Stories Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
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Reviews for Sing, Unburied, Sing
1,253 ratings119 reviews
What our readers think
Readers find this title beautiful, freeing, and a great modern classic. It is recommended for fans of Their Eyes Were Watching God and Mama Day. One of the best books in a long time.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 8, 2018
A compelling book, with strong characters and voices. Ward brings the various settings to life with writing that is original and creative without being overpowering. Most important to me are the fully realized characters. Although I normally like magic realism, in this case I found it to be a bit of a mixed success. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 8, 2018
This is a beautifully written book but a little too gritty for me. If you open a book with animal slaughter it's pretty certain that I am not going to get over it and love the book. I am also not a fan of magical realism and ghosts were very present in this book. The book has violence, racism, poverty, drugs and child neglect. Other than the grandparents, there was not a single adult in this book with any childcare skills at all. Thank goodness Jojo and Kayla had their grandparents and each other because they weren't getting any love or attention anywhere else. This is a book that I admired, rather than enjoyed.I received a free copy of this book from the publisher. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 8, 2018
Love the poetic writing. I had to make an effort to accept the spiritualism - seeing, hearing and talking to ghosts - because I recognize the cathartic nature of these reconciliations. The struggle at the end with the mother's release was, I think, worth it. The inner demons we all carry around got much needed "screen time" for me.So I was a little put off by the ghosts, but did enjoy the story anyway, and was enchanted with the way in which it's told. Yaya on Jesmyn Ward. Except the acknowledgements kind of put me off her. A tad too self-important. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
May 8, 2018
Mississippi has produced some amazing literary talent - Faulkner, Welty, Wright, Tartt, just to name a few. Jesmyn Ward has earned her place among the greats. There is a reason Salvage the Bones won the National Book Award - it's brilliant, beautiful, and haunting. Ward brings that same level of insight and heartbreak in her latest novel. Sing, Unburied, Sing has many similarities to Bones - lyrical prose, a focus on family, the experience of being black in the Deep South, and a brief glimpse into the unfairness of the world. This work, unexpectedly, delves into some fantastical and spiritual elements (the term "unburied" probably should have been my first clue) but remains true to Ward's style. Jojo is a 13-year-old boy of mixed race in a fictional town along the Mississippi coast. His father (Michael) is being released from prison, and his mother takes Jojo, along with his younger sister Kayla, with her to pick him up from Parchman (Mississippi's infamous federal prison). They leave behind Jojo's grandparents, Pop (a former Parchman inmate with stories that will make your eyes leak and your blood boil) and Mam, who is bed-ridden with cancer. As is the case for many young Black boys, Jojo takes on a role that should be reserved for those on the cusp of adulthood, not 13-year-old boys who should be running around with friends and playing sports. I honestly pictured him as a much older adolescent because of his maturity. As was the case in Ward's earlier works, the center of Sing, Unburied, Sing is the family unit. The relationship between Jojo and Kayla is inspirational, and illustrates the fierce bond that siblings form, especially in the face of uncertainty and parental failure. Yes, I said parental failure. Some may fault me, but I had a really hard time with Leonie (Jojo's mother). I won't go into detail in order to avoid spoilers, but lets just say that her maternal instincts are not great. Some might blame my lack of empathy for her on my privilege (yep, I used the "p" word), and perhaps they are right, but I just cannot understand her behavior as a mother. Pop and Mam, on the other hand, are two of the best background characters in literature, and their love for their children and grandchildren is evident from the first page.Another theme? Food. We do love our food down here in the South, and it is central to many of our most memorable moments. In Ward's novel, hunger illustrates more than just sustenance. It is a tool to fully explore the shortcomings of Leonie and Michael and the contrasting generosity of Pop and Mam. There is a sense of emptiness and hunger juxtaposed against other moments of fullness and fellowship. There is one seen in which Michael burns bacon, a metaphor for his subsequent actions and the harm done to his relationship with his children. Sing, Unburied, Sing is full of enough imagery and metaphor to fill an entire semester-long course, making it far beyond the scope of this measly book blog. Ward's name, along with that of Faulkner and Welty, is becoming synonymous with Mississippi literature, with good reason. She is a brilliant writer with an ability to haunt her readers while illuminating the overlooked lives of Mississippi's own. I have no doubt that come awards season, Jesmyn Ward will find herself in the familiar position of consideration for several of the big book awards, and I for one will be cheering her on.Thank you to Scribner for providing me with an advanced reader copy through NetGalley! - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Mar 5, 2019
So beautiful. And so Mississippi you can feel the heat and taste the dirt in the air. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Feb 9, 2019
This novel freed my mind. (That's all I have to say but the review field requires a minimum word count.) - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Nov 14, 2024
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- You Can Read All Important Knowledge Here - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Aug 20, 2021
One of the best books I have read in a long, long time. Wow. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Apr 8, 2021
Such a great modern classic. Fans of Their Eyes Were Watching God and Mama Day should read this. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
May 17, 2020
Meh. I struggled to read this. I had to force myself to pick it up. Normally, I give up on something like this, but I was compelled to get to the end. I did zip through the ending and liked it.
It had some great characters and I think that's what kept me reading and that's what earned it 3 stars. It just wasn't really my cup of tea. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
May 17, 2020
It's interesting when you realize you are drawn towards a certain subgenre. I really like reading Flannery O'Connor and I really liked reading this book. So, I must really like Southern Gothic.I started this in February and I picked it up and put it down often. I read other books in between. There's no particular reason, I thought, but there is. We have a story of Jojo, his little sister Kayla, mom Leonie, granddad and grandma, who are all black. Leonie's baby daddy is Michael, a white man, whose parents are a thousand percent against Leonie and the kids.Pop, the granddad, clearly loves his grandkids and deals with his daughter. Leonie is a meth addict and, while you see she loves her kids, they are not first in her life. They are not even second or third. That in itself was difficult. You get Jojo's POV often as well as Leonie's so you get to see both sides of the struggle between the two. I both wanted to shake and hug Leonie. And just plain wanted to hug Jojo.Enter Michael. A felon and pretty much a "not going to amount to anything" person. The book centers around the road trip that Leonie, Jojo, Kayla and Leonie's friend, Misty, take to pick up Michael when he's released from prison. It's a terrible trip with meth, police, kids left starving because they are forgotten, kids getting sick and getting smacked for it, just....tough to read.Lest you think it's just a road trip novel, we have Pop's history. Racism, very ugly racism, rears it's head in his past and comes into Jojo's future in the form of a ghost who hitches a ride back from the prison. Jojo and Leonie have a gift for seeing the dead, but the dead are there to remind them of failures. Just another weight on the shoulders of people who are shouldering too much.Don't let the ghost aspect throw you off. It's so well written that the ghosts are fully developed characters who get their own POV chapters to give you more insight into the lives that were led and ended abruptly.Highly recommend this one! - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 29, 2024
A lot to absorb. I will try writing my thoughts at a later date.
Okay so I combo audiobook and physical book read this. Part because I have a long commute and part because I would get to where I didnt want to get out of my car so needed both.
The audiobook was pretty good aside for the fact that it is read... slow. And I found myself getting very frustrated with that. Especially on Leoni's parts.
The following statements may contain spoilers so stop if you plan on reading the book.
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This was a ridiculously sad story. How bad is it I stepped away thinking "at least Jojo got a somewhat happy ending now that his mom is a full on meth head who quits bothering with her kids (because face it every single thing she did hurt them). I have zero pity for her character. At least bucked up enough to give her mom the exit she asked for? Literally the only OK thing she did ever.
What was up with the ghosts though? They kind of highjacked the story at the end which Im not sure did anything for the story. I mean... ok now its a supernatural story? Not what kept me hooked. Seemed better before them. Or leaving Given as a hallucination. I guess it was good to hear Richie's side of what happened to him alongside River's version.
The writing was good or I wouldn't have been hooked. But its a lot to absorb and due to the supernatural elements Im not sure what to even absorb. So it was good and lays out how racism continued/s to affect people today. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 24, 2024
Absolutely beautiful and heartbreaking writing. Such connection with the characters made me feel their pain and it was almost unbearable. Masterful writer. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Sep 6, 2024
Reason read: National Book Award winner, been on the shelf since 2018, read as alternative read on NYT best 21st century books.
This is a story of a broken family. Addictions is a major factor in the brokenness. Of course there is more. This is a biracial couple with two children that are either in prison or using drugs so they're not available to their children. It is sad situation. The main character is JoJo or (Joseph). He is the son and he is the one that takes care of his little sister, Kayla. The story is told by three narrators: JoJo is 13; Leonie the mother of JoJo and Kayla; Richie the ghost. Through the elements of magical realism, ghosts, the author can bring forward to the present the past abuses but also demonstrates the ongoing prejudices by the episode of the police officer stopping their car and putting people into handcuffs without cause. The book has been a coming of age story, a road trip fiction, thriller (I don't see this) and Southern Fiction. There is some African Voodoo culture in the book. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Sep 2, 2024
A searing, eviscerating, story presented in gorgeous writing, Sing, Unburied, Sing was a hard book to read. The characters’ pasts and present lives are filled with pain and longing, addiction, racism, and the prison system shattering lives.
The young boy JoJo emerges as a quiet hero, his little sister Kayla’s refuge. Their father is in prison, their mother self-involved and addicted to meth. Their grandparents nurtured them, but Mam is dying of cancer and Pop is struggling with her dying.
When JoJo’s father is to be released from prison, his mother takes the children on a road trip to meet him at the prison. Kayla is ill the entire trip, clinging to her older brother, thie children’s’ needs are not only unmet but irritating to the adults.
At the prison, the spirit of a boy, Richie, who died there joins the family; he seeks JoJo’s grandfather who had protected the him while in prison. He believes that if Pop can tell him how he died, he will be released from this world.
Richie realizes how little life has changed since he was alive. “Sometimes I think it done changed. And then I sleep and wake up, and it ain’t changed none.” Black boys and men are still targeted, still end up in prison for minor crimes.
The climax reveals a horrendous choice Pop had to make. Yet, JoJo takes his Pop’s strength and dignity as a mantle, learns to live with the ghosts, and we hope that he can transcend the past, taking Kayla with him, into a better future.
Now available in paperback. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
May 8, 2018
Sing, Unburied, Sing is the story of a seemingly broken mixed race family living in a poor area of rural Mississippi. The novel is told from the alternating points of view of a few of the key characters, the main one of whom I would say is the teenage son, Jojo. There's a road trip worlds away from the glamour of old school road trip movies and a good dose of magic realism/the supernatural.What I loved most about this book is the sense of place invoked by Jesmyn Ward's brilliant writing. Her descriptions are vivid because of the slant put on them by her characters, who are all trapped - physically and mentally - in some way and can't see a way out. I was also impressed by the way in which Sing, Unburied, Sing made me think about the treatment of black people - especially poor ones - in the US today and how many white people can't accept that it's essentially a continuation of the horrors of slavery. Despite this, I think there was something lacking in the story for me - perhaps it would've been interesting to have more character perspectives, or maybe delve a bit more into Leonie’s problems. Yet this is still a great read - lyrical (as many other reviews say!), gripping and extremely thought-provoking. I'm really keen to read more of Ward's work after this. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jan 23, 2024
Stunning and lyrical. Full of the sound and songs of the South, of Mississippi. Ghost-filled and other worldly. Beautifully told, finely rendered. A must-read. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Nov 4, 2021
Ghosts from the Slave Grounds
National Book Award for Fiction and recent MacArthur Genius Award winner Jesmyn Ward explores family bonds and racial prejudice and oppression in Sing, Unburied, Sing. Racism permeates the patch traversed by Jojo and his sister Kayla, his grandfather Pop and dying mother Mam, and his self-absorbed mother Leonie and his white father Michael, the pair not much older than children, and brings forth his murdered uncle Given, and another thirteen-year-old boy Richie, killed on the prison farm of Parchman (Mississippi State Penitentiary). Both Given and Richie, visible to Jojo, seek but can never find the release of justice, both stark and brutal reminders that post-racial America exists merely as a rhetorical phrase fronting a myth. As grim as this sounds, and as shocking as the family’s odyssey proves, Ward does find hope in the familial bonds of Jojo, Kayla, and Pop.
The story is about two journeys, one in real time and the other through recent history. Leonie solicits her white friend Misty, who has an imprisoned black boyfriend, to retrieve Michael from Parchman with her, where he has finished his term for cooking and selling meth. She thinks it’s a good idea to bring along her children, Kayla, a toddler, and Jojo, thirteen. As readers learn, she isn’t much of a mother, so bad and absent that her children can’t call her mom. She works but her passions are Michael, longing for Michael, and getting high. The burden of caring for the children fall to Pop and Mam, who now lies in bed, wracked by pain as she dies of cancer. Fortunately for Kayla and Jojo, Pop knows how to care for his family. As Jojo and Kayla share a special bond, so do Jojo and Pop. Pop teaches him how to live on the farm, the secrets of the woods and the animals, and of survival. He’s a man who has seen and experienced much pain in his life, including having served a term as a teen in Parchman. Slowly, over time, he tells Jojo the story of Richie, which is the tale of black oppression summed up in the short, brutal life of a thirteen-year-old boy. It’s a story Pop can barely finish, because, as readers will eventually learn, the ending is so horrifying.
Needless to say, the auto trip proves excruciating for the four, partly because Kayla becomes sick during it and nobody but Jojo seems to care or know how to comfort and help the child. When they eventually pick up Michael, the return trip devolves into something even more harrowing. Before getting Micheal, Leonie and Misty stop over at their lawyer’s house, Al. When you are dirt poor, as these people are, you get the Als of the world, representation by a drug addled wasted white man. He sends them off with crystal meth, and wouldn’t you know it, only hours out of prison, a cop pulls them over. Leonie, out love perhaps, desperation for certain, swallows the meth and what results nearly costs the travelers their freedom, and Jojo his life. It’s a scene straight out of a worst nightmare.
As if this wasn’t enough, Leonie possesses the ability envied by her mother, of seeing the dead. Perhaps this is supernatural, but it’s more likely the pain of losing her brother Given to murder. Suffice to say here that against all good advice, star athlete Given thought his white teammates regarded him as he regarded him, as brothers. In the end, his trust and misreading of race killed him as surely as the bullet. Let’s leave it for readers to discover the circumstances on their own. Leonie believes she sees him, voiceless, observing all her bad deeds. Jojo possesses this ability as well. It manifests when they pick up Michael from Parchman and Richie hitches a ride to find his old benefactor, Pop, whom he knows as River. What is little, perpetually a child Ritchie seeking? He’s wants the one person he felt ever acknowledged and cared about him. There’s much sadness here, but none sadder than Ritchie and what he represents.
While many will think, no, this isn’t a book for me, it, in fact, probably is a book for you, and especially for people who will never know about it. Because it is a story that needs telling and feeling on a visceral level, with the right among of openness to receive and acknowledge it. Strongly recommended. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Mar 8, 2024
This novel is about a poor black/mixed race family in modern day Mississippi but there are a lot of flashbacks to earlier 1900s. The mom and kids are on a road trip to pick up dad from prison. The grandmother is dying of cancer. Many of the characters scan see ghosts and have conversations with them.
The writing is very beautiful and poetic, but the plot moved very slowly especially in the first half. The second half was much better, though a little hard to follow, at least on audiobook. Jojo and Pop saved the book; the other characters I mostly found annoying and beyond stupid, making one bad decision after another. Even the 3 year old was just annoying as hell. The story is so so sad, horrific is parts, with hemes of death, home, and family. I can't say I enjoyed the book, though I think it was well written, just not for me. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Aug 23, 2021
Remarkable, humbling - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jul 3, 2021
adult fiction (race relations in modern Mississippi, prison stories, ghosts). I'd be surprised if this doesn't win some sort of award. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Feb 10, 2021
I thought, since this book was supposed to be the second in a series, I would find out what happened to the characters in Salvage The Bones, but Skeetah and Esch are only briefly mentioned in passing. Sing, Unburied, Sing is about a thirteen-year-old boy named Jojo and his poor but gifted family. His mother, Leonie, sees ghosts but doesn't have what it takes to be a mother, so JoJo is brother and mother to his younger sister, Kayla. When the three of them embark on a road trip to retrieve Jojo and Kayla's father, Michael, from prison, they also pick up Richie, another thirteen-year-old boy who is a ghost searching for answers to his violent death. As only Jesmyn Ward can, this story delivers a raw and emotional journey into southern life, death, and everything in between. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jan 2, 2021
Woman goes to pick up her boyfriend from jail. Son and daughter accompany her. The writing is pretty, but I didn't get the story really. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Jul 1, 2023
Admittedly, I suspected some kind of imitation Faulkner as I started to get into this, but this is a very fine thing. The supernatural is handled brilliantly and the novel builds and concludes like a bomb. - Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5
Dec 4, 2020
Words fail me, except that Jesmyn Ward may be one of our most influential writers in the States. This novel has ties to Beloved but maintains her own unique style. The book is haunted by two ghosts: Leonie's brother Given; and Richie, a young boy who Pap cared for in prison. Jojo and Kayla may only be children, but they are tough and sympathetic. Even Leonie, who is haunted by Given, her addictions, and her love for Michael, makes me feel a wringing sense of pity. Certainly in my contenders for Book of 2017. - Rating: 2 out of 5 stars2/5
Nov 22, 2020
I don't know what the hype is about regarding this book. I did not get much out of it. I kept waiting for the plot to begin and then I noticed I was three-quarters done. I liked Jojo, but not Leonie, so I couldn't wait until her sections were done. Maybe I needed to read the first book? It's not that I was lost, I just didn't really care about the characters and I gained no new insights into their culture (that is, this is nothing I haven't read in other books). What did I miss? - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Oct 24, 2020
4.5 This is beautifully written and alternates between the present and the past with 3 voices: JoJo the main narrator, a 13 year old boy; Leonie, his less-than-proficient mother (he doesn't even call her Mom) and Richie, a "ghost" from the past. JoJo is essentially raised by Pop and Mam, his grandparents. Pop is a patient, kind, upright man and Mam made up for the love JoJo misses from Leonie - until cancer had weakened her and made her bed-ridden. Meanwhile, JoJo is raising his 3-yr-old sister Kayla. His (white) father Michael is in jail. These family dynamics are complicated, but the societal ones are even more so. It spans 1950-present day in rural MS and it's hard to see that much has changed. Leonie's view: "Sometimes the world don't give you what you need, no matter how hard you look." (104) The best way to describe this book is that it is a ghost story: the characters are haunted by real events and societal patterns and the mindset and (lack of ) opportunity that goes with poverty and minimal education and small lives. There is some magical realism or element of other-worldly here too as Mam, Leonie and JoJo all have the "gift" that manifests in different ways. Pop unjustly served time in Parchman, a legendary MS prison -- the same place Michael is now for manufacturing meth. Richie was a 12-yr old boy also in the prison whom Pop tried to save. He is now a troubled, trapped ghost seeking closure. He says "Home ain't always about a place....Home is about the earth. Whether the earth open to you. Whether it pull you so close the space between you and it melt and y'all one and it beats like your heart. Same time....The place is the song and I'm going to be part of the song." JoJo is the link between past and present and the agent of healing and redemption. Kaylie too in her own way, which proves there is hope for the future. This is not an easy read, but it is a worthwhile one. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Aug 22, 2020
This book was quite interesting, but there were parts that I thought were unnecessary. There was a lot of discussion about traditions and I appreciated that because many younger generations do not want to continue family traditions. I also was a bit confused at some points about what was actually happening such as was she really seeing this person, is she hallucinating, or was she sick and seeing ghosts? Eventually, I figured it out, but it took some time and the audio may have made me think longer during those moments. - Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5
Aug 1, 2020
The premise and reviews of this book made it promising; however, I became disenchanted with the supernatural element. It would have been interesting to hear from other characters that were highlighted. This was a disappointing read for me. - Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5
Jun 3, 2020
This book didn't go quite where I expected -- there were definitely more ghosts -- but I really enjoyed how well she captured the characters' atmospheres as well as their perspectives. I was particularly impressed with how much empathy the writer imbued in the mother character so the reader can clearly see the drivers behind her addiction and behavior. I also felt hungry throughout the book. I thought it was very subtle and effective the way the characters, especially the kids, just never eat and the mother refuses food at every turn. An effective, visceral touch.
Book preview
Sing, Unburied, Sing - Jesmyn Ward
Chapter 1
Jojo
I like to think I know what death is. I like to think that it’s something I could look at straight. When Pop tell me he need my help and I see that black knife slid into the belt of his pants, I follow Pop out the house, try to keep my back straight, my shoulders even as a hanger; that’s how Pop walks. I try to look like this is normal and boring so Pop will think I’ve earned these thirteen years, so Pop will know I’m ready to pull what needs to be pulled, separate innards from muscle, organs from cavities. I want Pop to know I can get bloody. Today’s my birthday.
I grab the door so it don’t slam, ease it into the jamb. I don’t want Mam or Kayla to wake up with none of us in the house. Better for them to sleep. Better for my little sister, Kayla, to sleep, because on nights when Leonie’s out working, she wake up every hour, sit straight up in the bed, and scream. Better for Grandma Mam to sleep, because the chemo done dried her up and hollowed her out the way the sun and the air do water oaks. Pop weaves in and out of the trees, straight and slim and brown as a young pine tree. He spits in the dry red dirt, and the wind makes the trees wave. It’s cold. This spring is stubborn; most days, it won’t make way for warmth. The chill stays like water in a bad-draining tub. I left my hoodie on the floor in Leonie’s room, where I sleep, and my T-shirt is thin, but I don’t rub my arms. If I let the cold goad me, I know when I see the goat, I’ll flinch or frown when Pop cuts the throat. And Pop, being Pop, will see.
Better to leave the baby asleep,
Pop says.
Pop built our house himself, narrow in the front and long, close to the road so he could leave the rest of the property wooded. He put his pigpen and his goat yard and the chicken coop in small clearings in the trees. We have to walk past the pigpen to get to the goats. The dirt is black and muddy with shit, and ever since Pop whipped me when I was six for running around the pen with no shoes on, I’ve never been barefoot out here again. You could get worms, Pop had said. Later that night, he told me stories about him and his sisters and brothers when they were young, playing barefoot because all they had was one pair of shoes each and them for church. They all got worms, and when they used the outhouse, they pulled worms out of their butts. I don’t tell Pop, but that was more effective than the whipping.
Pop picks the unlucky goat, ties a rope around its head like a noose, leads it out the pen. The others bleat and rush him, butting his legs, licking his pants.
Get! Get!
Pop says, and kicks them away. I think the goats understand each other; I can see it in the aggressive butts of their heads, in the way they bite Pop’s pants and yank. I think they know what that loose rope tied around the goat’s neck means. The white goat with black splashes on his fur dances from side to side, resisting, like he catches a whiff of what he is walking toward. Pop pulls him past the pigs, who rush the fence and grunt at Pop, wanting food, and down the trail toward the shed, which is closer to the house. Leaves slap my shoulders, and they scratch me dry, leaving thin white lines scrawled on my arms.
Why you ain’t got more of this cleared out, Pop?
Ain’t enough space,
Pop says. And don’t nobody need to see what I got back here.
You can hear the animals up front. From the road.
And if anybody come back here trying to mess with my animals, I can hear them coming through these trees.
You think any of the animals would let themselves get took?
No. Goats is mean and pigs is smarter than you think. And they vicious, too. One of them pigs’ll take a bite out of anybody they ain’t used to eating from.
Pop and I enter the shed. Pop ties the goat to a post he’s driven into the floor, and it barks at him.
Who you know got all they animals out in the open?
Pop says. And Pop is right. Nobody in Bois has their animals out in the open in fields, or in the front of their property.
The goat shakes its head from side to side, pulls back. Tries to shrug the rope. Pop straddles it, puts his arm under the jaw.
The big Joseph,
I say. I want to look out the shed when I say it, over my shoulder at the cold, bright green day, but I make myself stare at Pop, at the goat with its neck being raised to die. Pop snorts. I hadn’t wanted to say his name. Big Joseph is my White grandpa, Pop my Black one. I’ve lived with Pop since I was born; I’ve seen my White grandpa twice. Big Joseph is round and tall and looks nothing like Pop. He don’t even look like Michael, my father, who is lean and smudged with tattoos. He picked them up like souvenirs from wannabe artists in Bois and out on the water when he worked offshore and in prison.
Well, there you go,
Pop says.
Pop wrestles the goat like it’s a man, and the goat’s knees buckle. It falls face forward in the dirt, turns its head to the side so it’s looking up at me with its cheek rubbing the dusty earth and bloody floor of the shed. It shows me its soft eye, but I don’t look away, don’t blink. Pop slits. The goat makes a sound of surprise, a bleat swallowed by a gurgle, and then there’s blood and mud everywhere. The goat’s legs go rubbery and loose, and Pop isn’t struggling anymore. All at once, he stands up and ties a rope around the goat’s ankles, lifting the body to a hook hanging from the rafters. That eye: still wet. Looking at me like I was the one who cut its neck, like I was the one bleeding it out, turning its whole face red with blood.
You ready?
Pop asks. He glances at me then, quickly. I nod. I’m frowning, my face drawn tight. I try to relax as Pop cuts the goat along the legs, giving the goat pant seams, shirt seams, lines all over.
Grab this here,
Pop says. He points at a line on the goat’s stomach, so I dig my fingers in and grab. It’s still warm, and it’s wet. Don’t slip, I say to myself. Don’t slip.
Pull,
Pop says.
I pull. The goat is inside out. Slime and smell everywhere, something musty and sharp, like a man who ain’t took a bath in some days. The skin peels off like a banana. It surprises me every time, how easy it comes away once you pull. Pop yanking hard on the other side, and then he’s cutting and snapping the hide off at the feet. I pull the skin down the animal’s leg to the foot, but I can’t get it off like Pop, so he cuts and snaps.
Other side,
Pop says. I grab the seam near the heart. The goat’s even warmer here, and I wonder if his panicked heart beat so fast it made his chest hotter, but then I look at Pop, who’s already snapping the skin off the end of the goat’s foot, and I know my wondering’s made me slow. I don’t want him to read my slowness as fear, as weakness, as me not being old enough to look at death like a man should, so I grip and yank. Pop snaps the skin off at the animal’s foot, and then the animal sways from the ceiling, all pink and muscle, catching what little light there is, glistening in the dark. All that’s left of the goat is the hairy face, and somehow this is even worse than the moment before Pop cut its throat.
Get the bucket,
Pop says, so I get the metal tub from one of the shelves at the back of the shed, and I pull it under the animal. I pick up the skin, which is already turning stiff, and I dump it into the tub. Four sheets of it.
Pop slices down the center of the stomach, and the innards slide out and into the tub. He’s slicing and the smell overwhelms like a faceful of pig shit. It smells like foragers, dead and rotting out in the thick woods, when the only sign of them is the stink and the buzzards rising and settling and circling. It stinks like possums or armadillos smashed half flat on the road, rotting in asphalt and heat. But worse. This smell is worse; it’s the smell of death, the rot coming from something just alive, something hot with blood and life. I grimace, wanting to make Kayla’s stink face, the face she makes when she’s angry or impatient; to everyone else, it looks like she’s smelled something nasty: her green eyes squinting, her nose a mushroom, her twelve tiny toddler teeth showing through her open mouth. I want to make that face because something about scrunching up my nose and squeezing the smell away might lessen it, might cut off that stink of death. I know it’s the stomach and intestines, but all I can see is Kayla’s stink face and the soft eye of the goat and then I can’t hold myself still and watch no more, then I’m out the door of the shed and I’m throwing up in the grass outside. My face is so hot, but my arms are cold.
Pop steps out of the shed, and he got a slab of ribs in his fist. I wipe my mouth and look at him, but he’s not looking at me, he’s looking at the house, nodding toward it.
Thought I heard the baby cry. You should go check on them.
I put my hands in my pockets.
You don’t need my help?
Pop shakes his head.
I got it,
he says, but then he looks at me for the first time and his eyes ain’t hard no more. You go ahead.
And then he turns and goes back to the shed.
Pop must have misheard, because Kayla ain’t awake. She’s lying on the floor in her drawers and her yellow T-shirt, her head to the side, her arms out like she’s trying to hug the air, her legs wide. A fly is on her knee, and I brush it away, hoping it hasn’t been on her the whole time I’ve been out in the shed with Pop. They feed on rot. Back when I was younger, back when I still called Leonie Mama, she told me flies eat shit. That was when there was more good than bad, when she’d push me on the swing Pop hung from one of the pecan trees in the front yard, or when she’d sit next to me on the sofa and watch TV with me, rubbing my head. Before she was more gone than here. Before she started snorting crushed pills. Before all the little mean things she told me gathered and gathered and lodged like grit in a skinned knee. Back then I still called Michael Pop. That was when he lived with us before he moved back in with Big Joseph. Before the police took him away three years ago, before Kayla was born.
Each time Leonie told me something mean, Mam would tell her to leave me alone. I was just playing with him, Leonie would say, and each time she smiled wide, brushed her hand across her forehead to smooth her short, streaked hair. I pick colors that make my skin pop, she told Mam. Make this dark shine. And then: Michael love it.
I pull the blanket up over Kayla’s stomach and lie next to her on the floor. Her little foot is warm in my hand. Still asleep, she kicks off the cover and grabs at my arm, pulling it up to her stomach, so I hold her before settling again. Her mouth opens and I wave at the circling fly, and Kayla lets off a little snore.
When I walk back out to the shed, Pop’s already cleaned up the mess. He’s buried the foul-smelling intestines in the woods, and wrapped the meat we’ll eat months later in plastic and put it in the small deep-freezer wedged in a corner. He shuts the door to the shed, and when we walk past the pens I can’t help avoiding the goats, who rush the wooden fence and bleat. I know they are asking after their friend, the one I helped kill. The one who Pop carries pieces of now: the tender liver for Mam, which he will sear barely so the blood won’t run down her mouth when he sends me in to feed it to her; the haunches for me, which he will boil for hours and then smoke and barbecue to celebrate my birthday. A few of the goats wander off to lick at the grass. Two of the males skitter into each other, and then one head-butts the other, and they are fighting. When one of the males limps off and the winner, a dirty white color, begins bullying a small gray female, trying to mount her, I pull my arms into my sleeves. The female kicks at the male and bleats. Pop stops next to me and waves the fresh meat in the air to keep flies from it. The male bites at the female’s ear, and the female makes a sound like a growl and snaps back.
Is it always like that?
I ask Pop. I’ve seen horses rearing and mounting each other, seen pigs rutting in the mud, heard wildcats at night shrieking and snarling as they make kittens.
Pop shakes his head and lifts the choice meats toward me. He half smiles, and the side of his mouth that shows teeth is knife-sharp, and then the smile is gone.
No,
he says. Not always. Sometimes it’s this, too.
The female head-butts the neck of the male, screeching. The male skitters back. I believe Pop. I do. Because I see him with Mam. But I see Leonie and Michael as clearly as if they were in front of me, in the last big fight they had before Michael left us and moved back in with Big Joseph, right before he went to jail: Michael threw his jerseys and his camouflage pants and his Jordans into big black garbage bags, and then hauled his stuff outside. He hugged me before he left, and when he leaned in close to my face all I could see were his eyes, green as the pines, and the way his face turned red in splotches: his cheeks, his mouth, the edges of his nose, where the veins were little scarlet streams under the skin. He put his arms around my back and patted once, twice, but those pats were so light, they didn’t feel like hugs, even though something in his face was pulled tight, wrong, like underneath his skin he was crisscrossed with tape. Like he would cry. Leonie was pregnant with Kayla then, and already had Kayla’s name picked out and scrawled with nail polish on her car seat, which had been my car seat. Leonie was getting bigger; her stomach looked like she had a Nerf basketball shoved under her shirt. She followed Michael out on the porch where I stood, still feeling those two little pats on my back, soft as a weak wind, and Leonie grabbed him by the collar and pulled and slapped him on the side of the head, so hard it sounded loud and wet. He turned and grabbed her by her arms, and they were yelling and breathing hard and pushing and pulling each other across the porch. They were so close to each other, their hips and chests and faces, that they were one, scuttling, clumsy like a hermit crab over sand. And then they were leaning in close to each other, speaking, but their words sounded like moans.
I know,
Michael said.
You ain’t never known,
Leonie said.
Why you push me like this?
You go where you want,
Leonie said, and then she was crying and they were kissing, and they only moved apart when Big Joseph pulled onto the dirt driveway and stopped, just so his truck was out of the street and in the yard. He didn’t lay on the horn or wave or nothing, just sat there, waiting for Michael. And then Leonie walked away from him and slammed the door and disappeared back into the house, and Michael looked down at his feet. He’d forgot to put shoes on, and his toes were red. He breathed hard and grabbed his bags, and the tattoos on his white back moved: the dragon on his shoulder, the scythe down his arm. A grim reaper between his shoulder blades. My name, Joseph, at the root of his neck in between ink prints of my baby feet.
I’ll be back,
he said, and then he jumped down off the porch, shaking his head and hauling his garbage bags over his shoulder, and walked over to the truck, where his daddy, Big Joseph, the man who ain’t never once said my name, waited. Part of me wanted to give him the bird when he pulled out of the driveway, but more of me was scared that Michael would jump back out of the truck and whip me, so I didn’t. Back then I didn’t realize how Michael noticed and didn’t notice, how sometimes he saw me and then, whole days and weeks, he didn’t. How, in that moment, I didn’t matter. Michael hadn’t looked back after he jumped off the porch, hadn’t even looked up after he threw his bags into the bed of the pickup truck and got into the front seat. He seemed like he was still concentrating on his red, naked feet. Pop says a man should look another man in the face, so I stood there, looking at Big Joseph putting the truck in reverse, at Michael looking down at his lap, until they pulled out of the driveway and went down the street. And then I spat the way Pop does, and jumped off the porch and ran around to the animals in their secret rooms in the back woods.
Come on, son,
Pop says. When he begins walking toward the house, I follow, trying to leave the memory of Leonie and Michael fighting outside, floating like fog in the damp, chilly day. But it follows, even as I follow the trail of tender organ blood Pop has left in the dirt, a trail that signals love as clearly as the bread crumbs Hansel spread in the wood.
The smell of the liver searing in the pan is heavy in the back of my throat, even through the bacon grease Pop dribbled on it first. When Pop plates it, the liver smells, but the gravy he made to slather on it pools in a little heart around the meat, and I wonder if Pop did that on purpose. I carry it to Mam’s doorway, but she’s still asleep, so I bring the food back to the kitchen, where Pop drapes a paper towel over it to keep it warm, and then I watch him chop up the meat and seasoning, garlic and celery and bell pepper and onion, which makes my eyes sting, and set it to boil.
If Mam and Pop were there on the day of Leonie and Michael’s fight, they would have stopped it. The boy don’t need to see that, Pop would say. Or You don’t want your child to think that’s how you treat another person, Mam might’ve said. But they weren’t there. It’s not often I can say that. They weren’t there because they’d found out that Mam was sick with cancer, and so Pop was taking her back and forth to the doctor. It was the first time I could remember they were depending on Leonie to look after me. After Michael left with Big Joseph, it felt weird to sit across the table from Leonie and make a fried potato sandwich while she stared off into space and crossed her legs and kicked her feet, let cigarette smoke seep out of her lips and wreathe her head like a veil, even though Mam and Pop hated when she smoked in the house. To be alone with her. She ashed her cigarettes and put them out in an empty Coke she had been drinking, and when I bit into the sandwich, she said:
That looks disgusting.
She’d wiped her tears from her fight with Michael, but I could still see tracks across her face, dried glossy, from where they’d fallen.
Pop eat them like this.
You got to do everything Pop do?
I shook my head because it seemed like what she expected from me. But I liked most of the things Pop did, liked the way he stood when he spoke, like the way he combed his hair back straight from his face and slicked it down so he looked like an Indian in the books we read in school on the Choctaw and Creek, liked the way he let me sit in his lap and drive his tractor around the back, liked the way he ate, even, fast and neat, liked the stories he told me before I went to sleep. When I was nine, Pop was good at everything.
You sure act like it.
Instead of answering, I swallowed hard. The potatoes were salty and thick, the mayonnaise and ketchup spread too thin, so the potatoes stuck in my throat a little bit.
Even that sounds gross,
Leonie said. She dropped her cigarette into the can and pushed it across the table to me where I stood eating. Throw that away.
She walked out the kitchen into the living room and picked up one of Michael’s baseball caps that he’d left on the sofa, before pulling it low over her face.
I’ll be back,
she said.
Sandwich in hand, I trotted after her. The door slammed and I pushed through it. You going to leave me here by myself? I wanted to ask her, but the sandwich was a ball in my throat, lodged on the panic bubbling up from my stomach; I’d never been home alone.
Mama and Pop be home soon,
she said as she slammed her car door. She drove a low maroon Chevy Malibu that Pop and Mam had bought her when she’d graduated from high school. Leonie pulled out the driveway, one hand out the window to catch the air or wave, I couldn’t tell which, and she was gone.
Something about being alone in the too-quiet house scared me, so I sat on the porch for a minute, but then I heard a man singing, singing in a high voice that sounded all wrong, singing the same words over and over. Oh Stag-o-lee, why can’t you be true?
It was Stag, Pop’s oldest brother, with a long walking stick in hand. His clothes looked hard and oily, and he swung that stick like an axe. Whenever I saw him, I couldn’t never make out any sense to anything he said; it was like he was speaking a foreign language, even though I knew he was speaking English: he walked all over Bois Sauvage every day, singing, swinging a stick. Walked upright like Pop, proud like Pop. Had the same nose Pop had. But everything else about him was nothing like Pop, was like Pop had been wrung out like a wet rag and then dried up in the wrong shape. That was Stag. I’d asked Mam once what was wrong with him, why he always smelled like armadillo, and she had frowned and said: He sick in the head, Jojo. And then: Don’t ask Pop about this.
I didn’t want him to see me, so I jumped off and ran around the back to the woods. There was comfort in that, in hearing the pigs snuffle and the goats tear and eat, in seeing the chickens peck and scratch. I didn’t feel so small or alone. I squatted in the grass, watching them, thinking I could almost hear them talk to me, that I could hear them communicate. Sometimes when I looked at the fat pig with splashed black spots on his side, he’d grunt and flap his ears, and I’d think he meant to say: Scratch here, boy. When the goats licked my hand and head-butted me while nibbling at my fingers and bleated, I heard: The salt is so sharp and good—more salt. When the horse Pop keeps bowed his head and shimmied and bucked so that his sides gleamed like wet red Mississippi mud, I understood: I could leap over your head, boy, and oh I would run and run and you would never see anything more than that. I could make you shake. But it scared me to understand them, to hear them. Because Stag did