Ace of Spades: A Memoir

Front Cover
Henry Holt and Company, Feb 6, 2007 - Biography & Autobiography - 320 pages

A take-no-prisoners tale of growing up without knowing who you are.

When David Matthews's mother abandoned him as an infant, she left him with white skin and the rumor that he might be half Jewish. For the next twenty years, he would be torn between his actual life as a black boy in the ghetto of 1980s Baltimore and a largely imagined world of white privilege.

While his father, a black activist who counted Malcolm X among his friends, worked long hours as managing editor at the Baltimore Afro-American, David spent his early years escaping wicked-stepmother types and nursing an eleven-hour-a-day TV habit alongside his grandmother in her old-folks-home apartment. In Reagan-era America, there was no box marked "Other," no multiculturalism or self-serving political correctness, only a young boy's need to make it in a clearly segregated world where white meant "have" and black meant "have not." Without particular allegiance to either, David careened in and out of community college, dead-end jobs, his father's life, and girls' pants.

A bracing yet hilarious reinvention of the American story of passing, Ace of Spades marks the debut of an irresistible and fiercely original new voice.

From inside the book

Selected pages

Contents

CHAPTER III
25
BETTER THE DEVIL YOU KNOW
51
RESTLESS NATIVES
68
CHAPTER VII
90
CHAPTER IX
133
CHAPTER X
149
CHAPTER XI
166
CHAPTER XII
226
CHAPTER XIII
243
CHAPTER XIV
255
CHAPTER XV
268
CHAPTER XVI
279
CHAPTER XVII
296
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
303
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (2007)

David Matthews is a writer living in New York. He has appeared on The Tavis Smiley Show and the CBS Sunday Morning Show, and in People magazine.

Bibliographic information