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320 pages, Hardcover
First published September 26, 2017
Crown offered a promo for a time in which stories were sent to those who signed on. This is how I came to read The Christmas Dance, the tale reviewed here. I did not read the entire collection, only this one from it. But the short story per se does not have its own ISBN, so reviewers must post reviews of individual stories under title of the entire collection. Just so’s you know. This is not a review of Five-Carat Soul.Herb Melton, a young scholar working on his PhD thesis at Columbia University, interviews two surviving members of the 92nd, an all-black infantry division known as the “Buffalo Soldiers,� about their experiences during World War II. The Judge is Walter Booker, a garrulous sort who is happy to chat, but clams up when asked about some parts of his wartime experience. A “skirmish� in which seventy fought and only seventeen survived is central. Carlos Lopez, his back bent from decades of delivering mail, was in the same company. He had been assigned to the 92nd because of his skin tone, while his lighter skinned brother was sent to a white division. He talks about his days as an outstanding dancer. In telling their stories, the two recount younger days in Harlem, seeing Count Basie at Minton’s ballroom, and one wartime battle in particular. A third voice is one Lillian Johns of Brockton Massachusetts.