It is a time of crisis in a major metropolitan city's Department of Elevator Inspectors, and Lila Mae Watson, the first black female elevator inspector in the history of the department, is at the center of it.
There are two warring factions in the department: the Empiricists, who rely on tests and measurements; and the Intuitionists, who can intuit any defects merely by entering an elevator cab. Lila Mae is an Intuitionist, with the highest accuracy rate in the department. But when an elevator goes into freefall on her watch, chaos ensues. It's an election year, and the good-old-boy Empiricists would love nothing more than to blame an Intuitionist.
Meanwhile, startling excerpts from the lost notebooks of Intuitionism's founder, James Fulton, surface, describing Fulton's work on the "black box," a perfect elevator that could reinvent the modern city. When Lila Mae goes underground to investigate the crash, she is drawn into the search for the missing notebooks and uncovers a secret that will change her life forever.
Everyman's Library pursues the highest production standards, printing on acid-free paper, with full-cloth cases with two-color foil stamping, decorative endpapers, silk ribbon markers, European-style half-round spines, and a full-color illustrated jacket. Contemporary Classics include an introduction, a select bibliography, and a chronology of the author's life and times.
Look for Colson Whitehead's new novel, Crook Manifesto.
About the Introducer COLIN GRANT is the author of six acclaimed books: Negro with a Hat: The Rise and Fall of Marcus Garvey, The Natural Mystics Marley, Tosh and Wailer, Bageye at the Wheel, A Smell of Burning, and Homecoming. He is a Fellow of the Royal Society of Literature and Director of Writers Mosaic. He teaches creative non-fiction writing at Oxford University.
"Magical . . . Ranks alongside Catch-22, V, The Bluest Eye, and other groundbreaking first novels . . . Whitehead shares Heller's sense of the absurd, Pynchon's operatic expansiveness and Morrison's deconstruction of race and racism." --San Francisco Chronicle
"The most engaging literary sleuthing you'll read this year . . . Extraordinary." --Newsweek
"Whitehead's prose is graceful and often lyrical, and his elevator underworld is a complex, lovingly realized creation." --The New Yorker