Negrophobia: An Urban Parable

by Amy Abugo Ongiri and Darius James

Amy Abugo Ongiri (Introduction) and Darius James (Preface)

0 ratings • 0 reviews • 0 shelved
Book cover for Negrophobia

Bookhype may earn a small commission from qualifying purchases. Full disclosure.

A provocative, raucous dark comedy about race and racism in America, now back in print after twenty-five years and with a new preface by the author.

Darius James’s scabrous, unapologetically raunchy, truly hilarious, and deeply scary Negrophobia is a wild-eyed reckoning with the mutating insanity of American racism. A screenplay for the mind, a performance on the page, a work of poetry, a mad mix of genres and styles, a novel in the tradition of William S. Burroughs and Ishmael Reed that is like no other novel, Negrophobia begins with the blonde bombshell Bubbles Brazil succumbing to a voodoo spell and entering the inner darkness of her own shiny being. Here crackheads parade in the guise of Muppets, Muslims beat conga drums, Negroes have numbers for names, and H. Rap Remus demands the total and instantaneous extermination of the white race through spontaneous combustion. By the end of it all, after going on a weird trip for the ages, Bubbles herself is strangely transformed.
  • ISBN10 1681373297
  • ISBN13 9781681373294
  • Publish Date 19 February 2019 (first published 1 April 1992)
  • Publish Status Active
  • Publish Country US
  • Publisher The New York Review of Books, Inc
  • Imprint NYRB Classics