Los Angeles Times

In the end, it all goes back to reggae

Jamaican music a key access point for 2015 Man Booker Prize winner Marlon James.

- DAVID L. ULIN BOOK CRITIC

Marlon James, who won the 2015 Man Booker Prize for his novel “A Brief History of Seven Killings” on Tuesday night in London, is the first Jamaican novelist to receive Britain’s most prestigiou­s literary award.

That’s only fitting — because James, who lives in the United States and teaches at Macalester College in Minnesota, brings his own powerful mix of influences and cultures to the novel, which reimagines the 1976 attempted assassinat­ion of Bob Marley and is a deeply moving, powerfully rendered tour de force.

Told in a cacophony of voices, the book becomes an investigat­ion of ethics and ambition, both personal and collective, with an eye toward the various ways in which public spectacle intersects with private lives.

The turning point in its creation, James told the Los

Angeles Times last year, came when he complained to a playwright friend, “I don’t know whose novel this is; I can’t figure out whose story it is,” only to have her reply, “Why do you think it’s one person’s story?”

Interestin­gly, James does not portray Marley directly in the novel; rather, he defines him only as the Singer, a spectral presence, as much an allegory or a symbol as a human being. This is the point, of course, for James understand­s that the novel is most effective when it gets at layers, nuances, that mere facts resist. “At some point you gotta expand on a story,” one character, a journalist, explains. “You can’t just give it focus, you gotta give it scope.”

That’s especially true of a novel such as “A Brief History of Seven Killings,” which is historical but also not.

Certainly, much of what it describes is recognizab­le, but what sets it apart is James’ ability to create a larger set of associatio­ns, a succession of overlappin­g frames.

The Marley shooting may be at the center of the novel, but it is not the whole story, not by a long shot. Rather, James works in everything from organized crime to the CIA, all of it filtered through an understand­ing of history and an abiding sense of place.

In accepting the Man Booker on Tuesday, James tied the whole thing back to reggae, which was for him, he explained, a key access point.

“The reggae singers Bob Marley and Peter Tosh were the first to recognize that the voice coming out our mouths was a legitimate voice for fiction and for poetry,” he declared.

This is an essential notion, not just in terms of what it tells us of the role of pop culture in determinin­g sensibilit­y, but also because of reggae’s history of speaking up for the underclass. What James is saying is that not only did Marley and Tosh recognize the validity of those voices, of that language, but that in speaking out of it and from it, they gave permission to those who followed, James among them, to express themselves on their own terms.

That, in turn, brings us back to the importance, or the power, of the novel — not to comfort, but to confront us, to allow or force us to see what we otherwise might not see.

Or, as James told The Times after the publicatio­n of “A Brief History of Seven Killings”: “I consider myself a moralistic writer. ... I got really interested in the motives of people: What is unchecked ambition? Who really suffers from violence? How by trying to escape it, you sometimes run right back into the middle of it.”

 ?? Neil Hall
WPA Pool / Getty Images ?? MARLON JAMES honored for his “A Brief History of Seven Killings.”
Neil Hall WPA Pool / Getty Images MARLON JAMES honored for his “A Brief History of Seven Killings.”

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