ArtiFact #15: Edward P. Jones - Lost in the City | Keith Jackewicz, Alex Sheremet

ArtiFact #15: Edward P. Jones - Lost in the City | Keith Jackewicz, Alex Sheremet

In 1992, Edward P. Jones published what might very well be his best work of fiction: Lost in the City, a short story collection that deals with (mostly) black characters in Washington, D.C., set between the 1950s and 1990s. Primarily working through understatement, an amalgamation of poetic and prosaic style, and competing POVs, many of these characters could have been of any race, dealing with his characteristically “mature” drama in any time period. How does Edward P. Jones achieve these effects? Does he effectively move between the criminal and the working class, the religious and the disconnected, or does he have a preferred turf? What structural choices does Lost in the City make? Finally, how does Edward P. Jones use race – and why is it better, more credible, and deeper than the ways race gets misused by modern authors?

Alex Sheremet and Keith Jackewicz discuss these and other questions.

You may also watch this discussion on our YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ihC2Fj6Vnw8

Timestamps:

0:24 – “I said, ‘I don’t need this anymore…’” 0:43 – introducing Edward P. Jones, Lost in the City, subjective/objective responses, the role of understatement 12:56 – Story 1 – The Girl Who Raised Pigeons – a father’s projection, encroaching danger, unexpected character arcs, stipulated meaninglessness 46:08 – Story 2 – The First Day – extremely compact writing, dueling child/adult POVs, growth of the narrator 01:06:54 – Story 3 – The Night Rhonda Ferguson Was Killed – the fame lottery vs. racial politics, an ending that belies the children’s own sense of ‘adulthood’ 01:28:04 – Story 4 – Young Lions – good, gradual characterization with an overlong middle; Keith on Caesar vs. community access 01:48:37 – Story 5 – The Store – Edward P. Jones’s best story? overturning stereotypes + archetypes, how to turn the prosaic poetic, character maturation 02:22:52 – Story 6 – An Orange Line Train To Ballston – a tight, realistic character sketch 02:28:19 – Story 7 – The Sunday Following Mother’s Day – surprising character arcs; Edward P. Jones playing off of competing + changing reader empathies 02:44:16 – Story 7 – Lost in the City – finding new territory in the “drugged-out haze” narrative 02:51:00 – Story 9 – His Mother’s House – Edward P. Jones goes Quentin Tarantino, and that’s no compliment 02:59:40 – Story 10 – A Butterfly on F Street – character sketch + unexpected trope inversions 03:01:54 – Story 11 – Gospel – gossip, religion, hypocrisy 03:07:35 – Story 12 – A New Man – one of the more mysterious, almost metaphysical stories from Edward P. Jones 03:20:00 – Story 13 – A Dark Night – another quick character sketch 03:27:14 – Story 14 – Marie – the POV of both a limited & powerful character, with a great, multi-faceted ending

Read the latest from the automachination universe: https://automachination.com

Read Alex’s (archived) essays: https://alexsheremet.com

Dan Schneider’s review of Lost in The City: http://www.cosmoetica.com/B235-DES175.htm

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