about the author
"It is my desire to be a great writer. I know that I still have a
mountain to climb to achieve that. With this first novel, I am just above the
foothills, but I see the path to the top, and it is my desire to write
compelling stories about everything that I find of interest. I hope to be with
you as a writer for a very long time, and I hope that you will enjoy reading my
work, because readers are the highest form of life on this planet."
"Truthfully, while I have been writing since I was 18, I didn't know
that I wanted to be a writer. I thought I was going to be a painter and
sketcher. Then I thought I was going to be a photographer. I tried a hand at
darkroom technician. I played in a band. It took me quite some time to discover
that I wanted to write. The great thing about being the son of Maya Angelou
is that I had the good fortune to grow up around some of the greatest black
artists, dancers, singers, musicians, and actors of our time. My mother was in
"The Blacks" in 1960, and in that cast were Ossie Davis, Ruby Dee,
James Earl Jones, Godfrey Cambridge, Roscoe Lee Brown, Lou Gossett Jr., and
there were so many more I can't even remember. In terms of musicians, Billie
Holiday, Clifford Brown, Eric Dolphy, et cetera. And on the political side she
headed Martin Luther King's Southern Christian Leadership Conference, so of
course I met Martin Luther King. Muhammad Ali met Malcolm X for the time at my
mother's house. So I would say I had the great fortune of living with one of the
most inspiring creative people, and she was my mother."
The above is from an on-line chat that Guy Johnson participated in on
December 10, 1998 archived by BarnesandNoble.com.
Echoes
of a Distant Summer
Click to order via Amazon
Format: Hardcover, 584pp.
ISBN: 0375505679
Publisher: Random House, Incorporated
Pub. Date: August 2002
Edition Desc: 1ST
Read
an AALBC.com review by Thumper
Guy Johnson, the author of the
critically acclaimed debut Standing at the Scratch Line, continues the
Tremain family saga.
Jackson St. Clair Tremain hasn’t spoken to his grandfather King in nearly twenty
years. Disgusted by the violence and bloodlust that seemed to be his
grandfather’s way of life, Jackson chose to distance himself from King and live
a simpler life. But now King is gravely ill, and his impending death places
Jackson’s life—as well as those of his family and friends—in jeopardy.
Reluctantly, Jackson travels to Mexico to see King. But after a brief
reconciliation, his grandfather is assassinated, and Jackson suspects that his
grandmother Serena may have had a hand in it. Jackson takes control of King’s
organization, and as he does, he reflects on the summers he spent in Mexico as a
child and the lessons he learned there at the knee of his strong-willed, complex
grandfather.
In Echoes of a Distant Summer, Guy Johnson introduces us to a new hero,
Jackson St. Clair Tremain, who learns that, like his grandfather, he must be
willing to protect those he loves—at all costs.
Standing
at the Scratch Line
Click to order via Amazon
Publisher: Random House, Incorporated
Date Published: November 1998
Format: Trade Cloth
Standing at the Scratch Line was selected as
AALBC.com
on-line book club's reading selection for October 1999.
Synopsis
In this hard hitting and action-filled novel, newcomer Guy Johnson (the son of Maya Angelou) introduces LeRoi Boudreaux Tremain, one of the most
complex and engaging African-American characters in fiction. From the forests of France in
WWI to the streets of New York City to a black township in Oklahoma, "King"
Tremain is the angel of vengeance wherever he sees injustice inflicted on his people,
friends or family.
Reviews and Commentary
After murdering two white lawmen,
LeRoi Tremain is on the run -- straight into the army and the Great War, where he proves
himself an able killer. The result is "a brief history of 20th-century black America
in the guise of a testosterone-fueled adventure yarn in this fast-paced, intelligent, and
extremely violent first novel." The author comes by his talents naturally; he's the
son of Maya Angelou.
Excerpt
LeRoi picked up the rifle that was leaning against a root with its stock in
the water. He checked the barrel carefully for obstructions, then mounted the rough ladder
that led up to the platform. Peering over the rim of the platform, he was surprised at
what he saw. His arrow was deeply embedded in the man's rib cage, but that is not what
surprised him. It was the badge on the man's chest. LeRoi had been expecting one of the
DuMonts or their kin. Instead he found the corpse of a white man who had pale skin, greasy
brown hair, and a handlebar mustache. He was obviously a deputy. As LeRoi pulled his arrow
free and wiped it off on the body of the deputy, he pondered whether he and his uncle had
walked into an ambush. Cupping his hands and blowing into them, he made two quick owl
hoots, a signal of alarm.
His signal was answered by six or seven shots. Standing up, LeRoi could see the flash of a
gun from another tree platform fifty yards away. As LeRoi shouldered the rifle and took
aim, he saw the pinkness of the man's face on the other platform. He squeezed the trigger
and saw the man's body jerk backward and fall into the sea of vapor. Several more shots
were fired in the distance, but LeRoi couldn't see where they came from.
It was clear the DuMonts had found out about the Tremains' raid and had somehow lured the
sheriff's men out to take their side. LeRoi went through the deputy's pockets, checking
for valuables. The man had only three dollars, which he took along with the badge. At the
base of the tree, he put the rifle and the bow into the small dinghy and paddled out to
find how his Uncle Jake had fared. Entering the channel, he let the current carry him. He
levered another bullet into the rifle's chamber and set it against the gunwale; he knocked
an arrow into his bow. Occasionally, he would row to avoid partially submerged logs and
other debris, but for the most part he listened and stared into the fog.
Somewhere ahead of him to his left, a man cried out in pain. LeRoi dug his oar deep into
the water to change direction and sent the dinghy slithering across the water. There was
another cry, sounding like his Uncle Jake. Up ahead he saw movement around the dim outline
of an island. He let the dinghy come to rest in a small thicket of bushes forty feet
distant from the island. There were sounds of heated conversation.
"Get this cargo back aboard the Sea Horse while I find out how this nigger knew about
our meeting." It was a voice of authority.
Another voice responded, "Aye, aye, sir."
A man cried out again. It was a long wail of agony and this time LeRoi knew it was his
uncle.
The gruff voice spoke again. "Tell me, nigger, how did you know that we was going to
be meeting here? It ain't gon' get no easier for you. You might as well talk now and save
yourself a lot of pain."
The other voice called out, "Billy! Billy, bring the boat in. We need to load
up!"
LeRoi heard the sound of an engine start and saw a small twenty-five-foot cargo boat chug
into view. It was the type of boat that small-time traders used to sell their wares along
the distant reaches of the bayou. The Sea Horse passed within fifteen feet of LeRoi on its
way to the island. Billy was visible as he steered the boat to its makeshift mooring.
LeRoi drew back his bow and let the arrow fly.
The force of the arrow penetrating into his shoulder knocked Billy into the water with a
splash. There was no other sound except the engine of the Sea Horse. The boat continued
chugging toward the island.
"Billy! Billy! Back off the steam! You're going to run aground!" The Sea Horse
continued on its course. "Billy! Billy! Are you daft, man?"
"What's going on over there?" the authoritative voice demanded.
"I don't know, sir! He's got way too much speed!"
LeRoi pushed off from the thicket and followed the Sea Horse, using the boat to shield his
approach. Before the boat crashed into the island, he heard his uncle call out defiantly
in a voice racked with pain, "Just kill me, cracker! I ain't telling you shit!"
The Sea Horse plowed into the foliage growing at the water's edge. LeRoi saw a man clamber
aboard and pull the levers to stop the engine. Before the man could turn around, an arrow
struck into the woodwork above his head. The man swiveled and jumped over the side of the
boat into the water. As he splashed away he shouted out, "There's more of 'em, sir!
There's more of 'em!"
"Jimmy Lee? Jimmy Lee?" the voice called out. "Are you alright, man?"
"I ain't hit, but there's more of 'em! I'm gettin' out of here!"
"You better come back here, Jimmy Lee!"
LeRoi cursed himself silently for missing the man in the boat, but the movement of the
dinghy had made his shot go wide. He paddled alongside the Sea Horse and climbed in. LeRoi
took another arrow from his quiver and waited. He heard a man walk through the underbrush
to the prow of the boat. LeRoi waited until he started to walk around to the side before
he stood up. As soon as he reached a standing position, LeRoi saw the man swing a
double-barreled shotgun in his direction. He ducked as both barrels discharged just above
his head, shattering the glass windshield and splintering the wood of the navigation
cabin. LeRoi stood up again, hoping to catch the man loading more shells into his shotgun,
only to find him running away through the trees. Aiming carefully, he caught the fleeing
figure in the thigh. The man went down but got up limping. He could be heard splashing
into the water on the other side of the island. LeRoi got out of the boat cautiously and
scouted the island to ensure that there were no more enemies about. He could still hear
the injured man making his way noisily through the water to safety.
Uncle Jake was lying next to a smoldering fire. He was bleeding from a bullet wound to his
stomach, blood oozing out with every intake of breath, covering his shirt and pants with
its dark maroon stain. There were burn marks on his uncle's face and neck. LeRoi knelt and
lifted up his uncle's head.
Jake opened his eyes slowly. "I'm gut-shot, boy. I'm gut-shot. I ain't gon' be making
it home with you this time."
LeRoi said nothing. His uncle was growing steadily weaker as he watched. He felt a vast
void within himself.
"You got to get out of here!" his uncle whispered. "We done walked in on
some gun-running business. We done killed some pirates too. They'll be coming back here as
soon as they find out what happened."
"I think I killed a couple of sheriff deputies too," LeRoi mumbled, unable to
take his eyes off the blood pumping out of his uncle's wound.
"Damn! Big stars fallin'; won't be long before day," his uncle gasped.
"Help me to the boat, boy. I want to be buried with my people."
As LeRoi carefully lifted his uncle in his arms he said, "Looks like those DuMonts
tricked us into an ambush."
"That may be true, but two of 'em paid for this trickery. They's lying on the other
side of the island. I shot them first."
In the distance they heard a man bellowing, "Ahoy! Ahoy Barracuda! Ahoy! We've been
attacked! Ahoy Barracuda!"
LeRoi carried his uncle to the Sea Horse. If there was any chance of his survival, he had
to be gotten home quickly and only the Sea Horse could do it.
"Don't leave them guns and ammunition," his uncle advised as LeRoi laid him down
in the Sea Horse. Sweat was streaming down Jake's face. "We gon' need all the guns
and ammo we can get if the pirates find out we was the ones who broke up this deal."
LeRoi made sure he could push the Sea Horse back into the water before he started loading
the boxes of rifles and ammunition. The boxes containing the rifles weighed so much that
he had to drag them to the boat, lift them against the gunwale, and slide them over the
side. He loaded all the ammunition before he heard the sound of another steam engine
chugging in the distance. Out of ten boxes of rifles and ammunition, he left three. He
pushed off and clambered aboard the Sea Horse.
LeRoi was numb. He didn't want his uncle to die. He focused his attention on getting the
steam engine started. He pitched six logs into the fire to raise the boiler's heat and
waited for a head of steam. The engine stalled several times before it engaged with a slow
mechanical clatter. LeRoi backed the boat out into the channel and turned the boat
upriver. After fifteen minutes of steaming in midchannel, he passed the dark shape of a
massive mangrove tree and turned into a small slough.
As soon as he rounded the first turn in the slough, three hundred yards from its entrance,
he released the pressure in the boiler and cut the engine. Then he went to check on his
uncle. Jake was unconscious and breathing shallow breaths. LeRoi attempted to make him as
comfortable as possible and put a bundle of clothing under his head. He picked up a long
stout pole, which all bayou boats carried, and began poling the Sea Horse slowly along. He
didn't want the noise of the steam engine to give away his position. He knew that within
half a mile a larger waterway intersected and he would be able to start the steam engine
again. Soon the trees overhanging the water created a dense canopy that cut the light and
gave the impression of a long, winding tunnel. The fog grew progressively thinner as LeRoi
pushed the Sea Horse further along the slough.
It was hard work, but LeRoi poled the boat steadily, changing sides to keep the craft in
the center of the slough. He refused to quit. He felt that if he could just get his uncle
home alive, perhaps there was a chance. There were other things to think about. He and his
Uncle Jake had created a problem for the family because white men had been killed. If it
had been only DuMonts that had been killed, there would have been no problem. No one would
have even investigated their death. It was different when colored men killed whites,
particularly sheriff's men.
LeRoi did not waste a moment of sorrow for the men he killed. It was not a moral question
for him; it was what he had been raised to do. His family had been feuding with the
DuMonts for generations. Before he was ten years old, LeRoi had seen his father and two
older brothers killed during a DuMont raid on the Tremains' corn liquor still. It was a
memory that remained close to the surface. He would have been killed as well if he had not
hidden in the surrounding underbrush. From that day on, he couldn't wait to go out and
spill DuMont blood. As far as he was concerned, death was a natural consequence for those
who were not careful or alert. His only concern about killing whites was the heat that it
might bring down on his family.
LeRoi, large and unusually muscular for his age, took part in his first raid against the
DuMonts when he was fourteen years old. During that raid he became what his uncle called
"blooded" because he killed his first man. On his next raid, he was blooded
again, but he was given greater respect for pulling an injured cousin to safety while
under fire. The Sea Horse, rifles, and ammunition represented the booty from his fifth
raid on the DuMonts and he was not yet eighteen years old.
LeRoi stopped poling and checked on his uncle, only to find that Jake was dead. He had
passed away without returning to consciousness. The blood from his wound had stopped
pulsing out of his body and was congealing on the deck. Jake's face had the look of
serenity. If it wasn't for the coldness of his skin and the lack of respiratory movement,
he could have been mistaken for being asleep. But he was not asleep, he was dead, and no
amount of praying would bring him back.
Uncle Jake had taken him under his wing and had served as a surrogate father after LeRoi's
own father had been killed. LeRoi felt as if his heart had been ripped out of his chest.
He dropped to his knees, fighting back tears, and cupped his face in his hands. It seemed
that nearly everyone that he cared for was being snatched from him. It seemed like a
punishment to him.
The Sea Horse scraped bottom and jerked to a halt. LeRoi slipped listlessly into the
water, which was barely four feet deep, and checked for the obstruction. A log had been
laid across the creek and embedded into the bank on both sides, one of the logs his family
had planted to prevent large boats from using the slough. By rocking the Sea Horse up and
down, he was able to jockey the boat over the log with only a few serious scrapes.
LeRoi had no words for the sadness he felt as he got back into the boat. He had only
formless emotions, which brought the taste of bile into his mouth. He picked up the pole,
took a deep breath, and stuck it back into the water; shoving hard, he propelled the Sea
Horse on down the slough. He could not have said that he loved his uncle, for he had never
used that word in relationship to himself, but he felt the agony of loss. And as with all
such negative feelings for which he had no words, LeRoi had to distill them into something
purer-like anger or hatred-in order to understand them. He burned with a hatred that was
beyond his years. He now had a greater debt to repay the DuMonts, one he would never
forget.
He remembered a story one of his Sunday-school teachers had told. It was about how when
each person is born, he starts off as a blank page, and with the passing of each day, more
of his life is written on the page. People died when there was no more room on the page to
write. He had felt then, and he felt now, if he had ever started off as a blank page, it
was no longer true. He felt like his page was already filling up with little mean words
about loneliness, pain, and disappointment. There didn't appear to be room on his page for
words about happiness or joy.