Joey Pinkney's Reviews > The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown

The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown by DeVaughn Lilly

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Aug 02, 12

Read from July 17 to August 02, 2012

The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown by Devaughn Lilly is non stop action in a historical context. Born just before the Roaring 20s, Gravvy Brown went on the be the youngest person in Louisiana history to be executed for murder and the first person to be executed by the electric chair - just three days before his twenty-first birthday.

Set as a frame story, The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown is Gravvy Brown's conveyance of three generations of his family's history to a reporter looking to get his big break the day before Gravvy's execution. Gravvy's voice during the book is easy, reflective and enthralling. DeVaughn Lilly did a tremendous job letting Gravvy paint the most vivid picture of the life and times of himself and his mother and even his grandmother and how they are all intertwined through struggle, drugs and racism. I was so immersed in the Gravvy's narrative that I forgot that I was reading a story within a story. The other thing that jogged my memory was the reporter David Wolfe occasionally asking a question or making a comment to the imprisoned Gravvy.

Each time I picked up the book, I felt like I was a part of the journey, seeing the world through Gravvy's eyes. The version of the book I read had 344 pages. I chuckled to myself when Gravvy was born just before the 200 page mark because I felt like we had gone through a lifetime of experiences with Gravvy by then. His inclusion in the actual story had yet to begin. Reading The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown felt like sitting around that one family member that knows everything about everybody. Gravvy makes it is easy to get caught up in this novel.

DeVaughn Lilly is the consummate historian, seamlessly infusing global, national and local news within Gravvy Brown's narrative of the first half of the 1900s. World War I, the Prohibition Era, Marcus Garvey's Black Nationalist Movement, Hollywood, shifts in the presidency, hurricanes, woman's suffrage, etc. All these things are seen through the eyes of Black folks trying to survive an overtly racist, yet beautiful American landscape. Lilly use history to add relevance to The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown. Those historical facts many times take a backseat many times to the great adventures Gravvy Brown shares.

To read the full JoeyPinkney.com Book Review of The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown, http://h1t.it/QjL4sn

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Reading Progress

07/17/2012 page 0
0.0%
07/18/2012 page 12
3.0% "This had started out to be a very interesting historical piece on New Orleans during the first half of the 1900s. Very crisp imagery. Vivid thoughts. I'm liking this so far."
07/20/2012 page 25
7.0% "There is more power in the first 25 pages of The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown than some authors can muster within a three book series..."
07/23/2012 page 74
21.0% "This is a great historical piece about the life and times of an African-American lineage surviving during the turn of the century in the early 1900s. There is so much going on, yet it is easily digestible."
07/23/2012 page 97
28.0% "As Ann Brown barrels through life the life of a runaway prostitute car-stealing thug, Richard, her trick-turned-boyfriend offers her a chance at normalcy."
07/23/2012 page 120
34.0% "I love the subtle use of the death of one character and the birth of another. This is simply a great read, and I'm enjoying every paragraph of The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown."
07/26/2012 page 149
43.0% "This is a thoroughly enchanting story up to this point, and guess what? The main character is going to be born on the next page! How do you like that for pacing?"
07/26/2012 page 161
46.0% "The plot ebbs and flows perfectly. The good times are not sappy, and the bad times are not unbearable. You can feel the tension of the Roaring Twenties as Gravvy continues to relay the story of his life."
07/27/2012 page 178
51.0% "As this story moves on, we learn out our place in American history as the main character blazes through the decades."
07/27/2012 page 197
56.0% "Wow, to see the growth a maturation in a character is an amazing thing. I feel like I lived a life time, and it hasn't been 200 pages... Kudos to Devaughn Lilly."
07/27/2012 page 212
61.0% "What a difference 3 years make: Anna goes from being a cocaine-addicted prostitute to a mother of two with a burgeoning acting career. Not bad for a Black woman in the 1920s... "The Magnificent Life of Gravvy Brown by Devaughn Lilly"
07/27/2012 page 230
66.0% "Like a DJ cross fading from one album to another, Anna Brown's life is going from one city to the next, from one phase to the next. Old experiences are extinguishing in New Orleans; new opportunities are blossom in NYC."
07/29/2012 page 252
72.0% "Young country boys in the bustling NYC of the late 20s. Eyes as wide as saucers and appetites even wider. It's a very interesting read. I'm seeing what I'm thinking are foreshadowing cues. Only the following chapters will tell."
07/31/2012 page 285
81.0% "From the feet of poverty to the lap of luxury, yet there's a feeling that within the next 10 pages or so, things are about to change horribly."
08/01/2012 page 301
86.0% "As Anna dreams of fame and fortune come true, she traps her and her loved ones within the folds of the security needed to stay safe. Her drug problem rages as her success continues to build. And her precious sons are coming of age in spite of it all."
08/01/2012 page 350
100.0% "Clap, clap, bravo! This is one of the best books you can read. Thoroughly enjoyed it."
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