The Time of Our Singing, Richard Powers' most recent addition to his oeuvre, is the kind of novel that comes so close to perfection that a reader asks 'How?' How does he know all the things he does? How was he able to incorporate them into the novelistic form? How does he manage to live in a society that hates very bright people like the Joker hates Batman and survive, not to mention achieve all he has?
The book is about the Strom family. The parents, Delia and David, meet at Marian Anderson's historical performance in front of the Lincoln memorial in 1939. Anderson had been barred from performing in Constitution Hall because the Daughters of the American Revolution, its owners, did not want it soiled by a Negro's presence. Despite the fact Delia cannot even drop into a coffee shop with David in segregated Washington, D.C., the classically trained singer and the physicist from Germany fall in love.
Though they have only one family between them, hers, because his has been lost in the Holocaust, the couple decides to raise its children for a colorblind society. However, they are attempting an impossible task. Perhaps somewhere in the future tides of time a colorblind American society exists. But, the Stroms' marriage will not be legal in a third of the states until 1967. (Delia will be dead by then.) De facto segregation denies them housing in New York City until a kind African-American widow takes pity. Delia is spat on during public outings and learns to ride in the backseat of cars, as if she is a servant, when her husband is driving. The doctors who deliver the three children insist on classifying them as 'colored' on their birth certificates.








Article comments
1 - Eric Olsen
MD, excellent review, thanks.