'Devil Is Fine' explores race, colonialism and grief through magical realism - podcast episode cover

'Devil Is Fine' explores race, colonialism and grief through magical realism

Jul 09, 20249 min
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Episode description

Devil Is Fine, the new novel by John Vercher, follows an unnamed protagonist banging out a book pitch in a fugue state that mirrors what's happening in his own life: after the death of his son, a biracial writer inherits a plantation from the white side of his family, which has the remains of both his slave-owning ancestors and the people they enslaved. In today's episode, Vercher speaks with NPR's Lauren Frayer about why he felt magical realism made the story about American history and loss and racism more accessible, and how different layers of grief manifest in the story.

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'Devil Is Fine' explores race, colonialism and grief through magical realism | NPR's Book of the Day podcast - Listen or read transcript on Metacast