17. The main character has earned — and squandered — more talent and opportunities than many can only dream of. Think about what he has lost professionally and socially. Do you think at thirty-five he has a fighting chance of redemption in his public and private life? How is his stunning fall from grace in the woods also a beginning?
18. Would you say that by the end the Everyman-narrator has expanded his definition of what it is to be black into what it is to be human? Talk about this process in the novel. When Pincus pushes him to explain his thinking, he says, “I think I experienced most of what a black man — any man — can experience, late in America — the good and the bad, mostly the bad. And I think it’s useless to blame. I have had, in my whole life, one black friend — he’s now insane. They tried their best, all of them, whether they had the right or the power to do so, to make me assimilate, to ‘sivilize’ me. It never worked. That is the heart of resistance — holding out for the good: That is what I always thought it was to be black, other, or any different title I can paste on myself’ (p. 399).
19. When he says, “I’m a dead man, Gavin” (p. 413), is it fear of retribution from the golfers? End-of-the-road despair about destitution and his lost family? (Does it make us think of Joyce’s story “The Dead”?) And another Irishman, Gavin responds mordantly, “Pfft. . who isn’t?” (p. 414). If this is the human condition in an existential sense, is Thomas suggesting that it is also the human condition to aspire, to seek redemption, not just to endure but to prevail?
20. “We proclaim love our salvation. .” It is with this epigraph that Thomas sends the reader off on the epic journey of Man Goes Down. And the envoi quoted before the last chapter is from “Little Gidding,” which we have encountered often in the novel. (The narrator’s doctoral thesis was on Eliot, and Claire read from “Little Gidding” at her father’s funeral, to cite only two of the references.) “In my end is my beginning.” The central character, the Ishmael he claims in jest, has been lost and now he’s found. Is it amazing grace? Was it his descent into the heart of darkness that set him free? Is it third (or fourth) day resurrection? See page 425. “. . she is that star, its end and its beginning.” How do you feel about the narrator’s proclamation that Claire, a white woman, is his Polaris? Consider this with the understanding of what, in a multicultural sense, the north star symbolizes.
Suggestions For Further Reading:
Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison; Just Above My Head by James Baldwin; Fear and Trembling by Søren Kierkegaard; Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man by James Joyce; The Great Gatsby by F. Scott Fitzgerald; The Souls of Black Folk by W. E. B. DuBois; The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man by James Weldon Johnson; If He Hollers Let Him Go by Chester Himes; Walden by Henry David Thoreau; Four Quartets by T. S. Eliot; Moby-Dick by Herman Melville; A Raisin in the Sun by Lorraine Hansberry; Notes from the Underground by Fyodor Dostoyevsky; Tonio Krüger by Thomas Mann; Narrative of the Life of Frederick Douglass, an American Slave by Frederick Douglass; The Dutchman/The Slave by LeRoi Jones (Amiri Baraka); The Duino Elegies by Ranier Maria Rilke; The Adventures of Huckleberry Finn by Mark Twain; Their Eyes Were Watching God by Zora Neale Hurston; The Odyssey by Homer