About The Book
O Magazine’s Favorite Books of 2011 list
Slate’s Best Books of 2011 list
Library Journal’s Top Ten Best Books of 2011 list
Atlanta Magazine’s Best Books of 2011 list
June 2011 Indie Next Pick
National Women’s Book Association Great Group Read for 2011
With the opening line of Silver Sparrow, “My father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist,” author Tayari Jones unveils a breathtaking story about a man’s deception, a family’s complicity, and two teenage girls caught in the middle.
Set in a middle-class neighborhood in Atlanta in the 1980s, the novel revolves around James Witherspoon’s two families—the public one and the secret one. When the daughters from each family meet and form a friendship, only one of them knows they are sisters. It is a relationship destined to explode when secrets are revealed and illusions shattered.
As Jones explores the backstories of her rich yet flawed characters, she also reveals the joy, and the destruction, they brought to one another’s lives.
At the heart of it all are the two girls whose lives are at stake, and like the best writers—think Toni Morrison with The Bluest Eye—Jones portrays the fragility of her characters with raw authenticity as they seek love, demand attention, and try to imagine themselves as women.
“Silver Sparrow will break your heart before you even know it. Tayari Jones has written a novel filled with characters I’ll never forget. This is a book I’ll read more than once.” —Judy Blume
“A tense, layered and evocative tale . . . Jones explores the rivalry and connection of siblings, the meaning of beauty, the perils of young womanhood, the complexities of romantic relationships and the contemporary African-American experience.” —Minneapolis Star Tribune
“This is a complicated, heartbreaking and very rich story about how secret sisters find each other but lose as much as they gain in the process.” —Michele Norris on NPR’s “All Things Considered”
“It’s an amazing, amazing read.” —Jennifer Weiner on NBC’s “Today”
“In Silver Sparrow—an amazing novel about a man with two families, one hidden and one public—Jones does something breathtaking and difficult: She renders a unique family dynamic with such precision and sensitivity that it becomes universal. It is amazing to watch, time and time again in this book, how Jones reveals the ways in which family both creates and destroys our identity.” —Kevin Wilson in a Salon feature on writers’ favorite books of 2011
“A love story . . . Full of perverse wisdom and proud joy . . . Jones’s skill for wry understatement never wavers.” —O: The Oprah Magazine
“Charting a vast emotional unknown is Tayari Jones’s compelling third novel, Silver Sparrow, in which a teenage girl’s coming of age in 1980s Atlanta is shadowed by her dawning understanding of a corrosive secret — her father’s second family.” —Vogue
“The most immersive novel I read in 2011 . . . It’s one of those ‘just one more chapter’ kinds of books that require much last-minute changing of plans, because real life feels far less amusing, appalling, shocking, and loving than the world of its characters.” —Slate
“Tayari Jones has taken Atlanta for her literary terroir, and like many of our finest novelists, she gives readers a sense of place in a deeply observed way. But more than that, Jones has created in her main characters tour guides of that region: honest, hurt, observant and compelling young women whose voices cannot be ignored . . . Impossible to put down until you find out how these sisters will discover their own versions of family.”—Los Angeles Times
“Populating this absorbing novel is a vivid cast of characters, each with his own story . . . Jones writes dialogue that is realistic and sparkling, with an intuitive sense of how much to reveal and when.” —The Washington Post
“Award winner Tayari Jones weaves a tale of Black bigamy and two families in the fascinating fiction of Silver Sparrow.” —Ebony
“Tayari Jones’s immensely pleasurable new novel pulls off a minor miracle . . . Subtly exploring the power of labels, Jones crafts an affecting tale about things, big and small, that we forfeit to forge a family. There are no winners in this empathetic and provocative story, only survivors.” —More
“If your mom is a fan of emotionally charged morality tales (and whose mom isn’t?), she’s going to devour Tayari Jones’s third novel, Silver Sparrow, in a single sitting. Jones, a native Atlantan, once again mines her town for material and strikes serious pay dirt.” —Essence
“Sharp as a blade, gleaming with ‘sense’ and humor. Her themes of legitimacy and secrets play out with symphonic, seemingly effortless resonance, and her indelible characters—one daughter a secret, discovered by the other—redefine love, loyalty, and betrayal in a New South only generations removed from slavery’s fracture. Jones is a master, and Silver Sparrow is a revelation, alive with meaning, heartbreak, and hope.” —Jayne Anne Phillips, author of Lark and Termite
“Silver Sparrow grabs you with a first sentence that manages to be both matter of fact and mysterious and refuses to release you until she has finished a story that takes you deep into the lives of a family that is anything but ordinary. Graceful writing and careful attention to details have always been on display in Jones’s writing, but with this novel, she has found her own dazzlingly original voice, and in her hands, a sparrow suddenly becomes a soaring songbird.” —Pearl Cleage, author of Till You Hear from Me
About The Author
Tayari Jones has written for McSweeney’s, the New York Times, and The Believer. Her first novel, Leaving Atlanta, received best of the year nods from the Washington Post, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution, and Creative Loafing. Her second book, The Untelling, won the Lillian C. Smith Award from the Southern Regional Council and was a Target Breakout Book. And her most recent book, Silver Sparrow, was an O, The Oprah Magazine Best Book for 2011, Library Journal’s Best Book for 2011, and the National Women’s Book Association 2011 Great Group Read.
Jones holds degrees from Spelman College, Arizona State University, and the University of Iowa. She is spending the 2011-2012 academic year at Harvard University as a Radcliffe Institute Fellow, researching her fourth novel. For more information visit www.tayarijones.com.
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Excerpt, Essay & More
A Conversation With The Author – Download The Interview
What was your inspiration for Silver Sparrow?
I have always been intrigued by the idea of “half” sisters. I have two sisters with whom I share a father, but we each have different mothers. They were born before my father met my mother, and they grew up in another state and led completely separate lives from me and from each other. When I was a little girl, with only brothers, I used to fantasize about having two big sisters far away who would love me, dress me up, listen to me talk, et cetera.
The link between my own personal obsession and this fictional story was inspired quite accidentally. While enjoying a night out with a bunch of friends, we were discussing one of the many cases you hear about—a man dies and the other grieving widow shows up with her stair-step kids. One of my girlfriends looked up from her margarita and said, “You know, he had to have some help from the inside. You cannot get local bigamy off the ground unless one of the women is willing to work with you.” It was all I could do to keep from running out of the bar to get home and start writing.
The first line, “My father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist,” jumped into my head, as clearly as though someone had spoken into my ear.
When you use the expression half sister, why do you put the word half in quotation marks?
I was giving a reading, and during the Q&A I mentioned my “half sisters.” My nephew in the audience said, “Don’t say ‘half,’ Auntie. That’s an ugly word. There are no half people.” I always thought of it as just a description, and I didn’t think it was offensive, because it’s reflexive. But it hurt him to hear me describe his mother in that way. So now I use the word very self-consciously, if at all. I should probably say “my sister with whom I share a father.” It’s a mouthful, but I would rather say that than hurt him again.
Why did you tell this story through the perspective of the two daughters, Dana and Chaurisse? Was one of the girls easier to access than the other?
The story felt incomplete without both girls’ perspectives or without their mothers’. I began the book from Dana’s point of view, but her view in limited. I needed a voice from the other side of the wall. I am glad that I used Chaurisse’s voice also, because as I wrote her, I came to love her as much as I love Dana. I found the girls equally easy and equally difficult to access. I think it’s because I identify so completely with both of them. Like Chaurisse, I have a close relationship with my father. I had such fun writing their scenes together, and in order to do it, I was able to tap into my own inner girl and think of life before I understood my parents as people with layers and complications. It means so much to a girl to have her father’s attention. A father makes you feel special in a way that no other person can really duplicate.
At the same time, I am a daughter in a family that really values boy children. My childhood was a happy one: two parents, two brothers, caring and affection all around. Still, I lived in the space where many girls find themselves—loved, but not celebrated in the same way as a brother. I borrowed an actual room from my own childhood for Silver Sparrow. When Dana and Ronalda go into the basement and the whole place is set up to show how much Ronalda’s dad “loves being a black man,” this is straight from my parents’ house. A picture of my brother was on the wall between Malcolm X and W. E. B. DuBois. It was clear they had very high hopes for him! So I could understand Dana in her insider/outsider role.
What roles do social class and privilege play in the novel?
Social class has always been an issue that interests me. I think Silver Sparrow complicates the question a little bit. Dana has many bourgeois affectations, but she and her mother are not as financially secure as Chaurisse and her mother. So much of class is about performance. Dana and her mother have upwardly mobile aspirations and do everything they can to transcend social class, but, of course, money limits their options. Chaurisse enjoys great privilege, but she doesn’t know it, and I think this is often the case. People don’t go around thinking how lucky they are that their dad claims them. She thinks of herself as just average. She has no idea that the life she enjoys is on someone else’s back. Her moral litmus test is what she will do once she discovers the truth.
You delve into the idea of titles, that calling someone a “wife” doesn’t really explain “the full complexity of her position” and that it “matters what you called things.” Why is a title—and the firm boundaries that come with it—so important?
Actually, I think Silver Sparrow makes you wonder if titles are all that important after all. Clearly titles give people access to social standing. Laverne is the “wife,” and that gives her public approval. But I feel that Gwen is his wife, too. And no matter what James chooses to say, Dana is his “daughter.” When I started writing the book, I didn’t understand how deep these sorts of familial relationships could be, regardless of what we choose to call them.
How did you come to the title Silver Sparrow?
This was really an eleventh-hour title. This book went through half a dozen titles before I settled on Silver Sparrow. The reference is to the gospel classic “His Eye Is on the Sparrow.” When I was a girl, I took great comfort in the idea that God is taking care of everything and everyone, even a tiny sparrow. (This was especially important because I grew up in Atlanta during a very dangerous time.) The characters refer to the song, and it occurred to me that although Chaurisse thinks of Dana as her “silver girl,” in many ways Dana is the tiniest sparrow in the story. She is flawed, of course, and sometimes she acts out, but she is also “the least of these.”
You use the girls’ voices to tell the stories of their parents, relating events that happened before they were even born. Why did you choose this unusual technique?
Again, I don’t have a hard “why.” It felt quite natural. I think we all tell stories about things we could not have possibly witnessed. When stories are handed down, we feel that we have the authority to tell them. We take what we were told and let our imaginations fill in the details. I often joke that our parents’ courtship story is our first encounter with propaganda. I know that I, for one, can recite the fairy tale of how my parents met—at an NAACP meeting in 1962—as if I had been right there, hiding in my mother’s A-frame purse.
Like your previous two books, Silver Sparrow is set in Atlanta in the 1980s. Why did you pick Atlanta for the setting, and what role does landscape play in shaping your narrative?
Sometimes I wonder if my imagination just lives in Atlanta. When the story comes to me, the characters tend to be hanging out in all my old stomping grounds. Atlanta has been such a gift to my work. The “new” and urban South is ever changing, but we still wear our history on our sleeves. This is what makes Southern literature so rich, so ultraspecific and universal at the same time.
What do you hope readers will take away from Silver Sparrow?
I hope that readers will come away from the book with a sort of tolerance for people who find themselves in complicated and messy situations. When I started writing this novel, I didn’t really have empathy for Gwen, and I had nothing but sympathy for Laverne. But by the time I finished, I sort of understood the way people get trapped and try to make the best out of bad situations.
Both women love their daughters with a bottomless devotion. As Dana would say, “You can’t help but respect something like that.” After visiting many bookstores and book clubs, what surprised you most about readers’ reactions to the book? What questions were you asked most often?
This is a hard question because different readers asked different questions. One thing that surprised me was how the conversation often started off with readers saying which of the girls they liked best. Some even divided themselves into Team Dana and Team Chaurisse. But by the end of the conversation, everyone seemed to understand that there are no real winners or losers in this story. We all ended up being open to all the characters, even James, who causes so much pain to everyone.
Even though every audience is unique, there are some questions that come up over and over. Most people want to know how much of my real life is in the story. It seems that if you write a memoir, people want to catch you telling a lie, and when you write a novel people want to catch you telling the truth. It’s a hard question to answer. Some of the story is taken from my real life, but all of the story is taken from my real heart. I have experienced every emotion that I put onto these pages.
As you traveled and promoted the book, you were approached by many readers who themselves were “silver sparrows.” Did you expect that? Was it primarily a female phenomenon, or did you encounter male silver sparrows, too?
The first person to use the term was a man. He sent me an e-mail that said, “I guess I am a Silver Sparrow. I just never had a name for it.” Secret children are much more prevalent than we know.
When I was on NPR, I was stunned at how many callers from all over the country had silver sparrow stories to tell. I wrote Silver Sparrow because I was working out my feelings about my own little family, but, as often is the case with stories—my story wasn’t my story alone. It belongs to everyone.
Reading Group Guide
Questions for Discussion – Download The Reading Group Guide
1. Gwen tells Dana that they have an advantage over Laverne and Chaurisse because they know the truth. Is this true?
2. Is it possible to have a healthy relationship that is not monogamous?
3. Should Gwen have married Raleigh when she had the chance?
4. There is so much talk these days about fatherhood—contrasting the deadbeat dad with the Bill Cosby–type father. How do you evaluate James Witherspoon, who is both?
5. Both Dana and Chaurisse have relationships with older boys who don’t necessarily treat them well. What do you think accounts for this?
6. Is Laverne’s life better or worse for having married James? What about Gwen? Does James love Laverne or Gwen?
7. Tayari Jones often writes about the way real people interact with history, for example, Gwen’s feelings about the death of Martin Luther King. How have you interacted with history? How did it affect your personal story?
8. Does Chaurisse have an obligation to be “sisterly” toward Dana once she learns they are related? By that token, does Dana have any obligation to Chaurisse, as a friend or as a sister?
9. Why do you think Raleigh is so loyal to James?
10. What is the role of economics in this story?
11. Much of the book is set in Laverne’s salon, the Pink Fox. How does hair figure into this story? Do you think your own hair has impacted your life? For better or for worse?
12. Was Gwen wrong to confront Laverne?
13. Which of the characters was your favorite? Which characters would you like to know more about?
14. Who do you think sent the mysterious postcard at the end of the book?
15. Could this story have had a happy ending?
About The Interviewer
Judy Blume spent her childhood in Elizabeth, New Jersey, making up stories inside her head. She has spent her adult years in many places doing the same thing, only now she writes her stories down on paper. Adults as well as children will recognize such Blume titles as: Are You There God? It’s Me, Margaret, Blubber, Just as Long as We’re Together; and the five book series about the irrepressible Fudge. She has also written three novels for adults, Summer Sisters, Smart Women, and Wifey, all of them New York Times bestsellers. More than 80 million copies of her books have been sold, and her work has been translated into thirty-one languages. She receives thousands of letters a year from readers of all ages who share their feelings and concerns with her.
Judy received a B.S. in education from New York University in 1961, which named her a Distinguished Alumna in 1996, the same year the American Library Association honored her with the Margaret A. Edwards Award for Lifetime Achievement. Other recognitions include the Library of Congress Living Legends Award and the 2004 National Book Foundation’s Medal for Distinguished Contribution to American Letters.
Judy and her husband George Cooper live on islands up and down the east coast. They have three grown children and one grandchild.
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New York Times bestselling author Richard Russo will interview Hillary Jordan about her book When She Woke. During the live webcast you’ll be able to chat with other book club participants and even submit questions to be answered during the live event.
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