cover image Finding Makeba

Finding Makeba

Alexs D. Pate. Putnam Publishing Group, $21.95 (256pp) ISBN 978-0-399-14200-0

In a Philadelphia bookstore, African American writer Ben Crestfield asks a young woman for her name so that he can autograph a copy of his first novel for her. When she replies, ""Makeba Crestfield,"" he realizes she's his only child, the daughter he hasn't seen and he left her mother when Makeba was 10. Ben's novel is the thinly disguised story of his marriage to 19-year-old Helen, who was pregnant with Makeba when he was a 22-year-old part-time English major studying on the G.I. Bill in the 1970s, and how the relationship unraveled over the next decade as he tried to be both an artist and a responsible family man, churning out copy at an ad agency to pay the bills. Makeba, in turn, hands Ben a letter and a journal in which she has recorded her reactions to his version of events. The ensuing narrative interleaves Ben's book's chapters and Makeba's journal entries into a dialogue between father and daughter. Pate draws Ben, the passive but possessive Helen and Makeba with keen psychological insight. He's less successful with Helen's mother, Lena, a problematical character who has special powers that seem to combine voodoo and natural paganism. The story is further complicated by the introduction of Ben's personified guilt in the form of a spiritual force called Mates, an entity that exists only to punish whoever unintentionally or deliberately destroys love. Despite its flaws, Pate's second novel (after Losing Absolom, named 1994 Best First Novel by the Black Caucus of the ALA) is a sensitive exploration of an African American male's struggle to be a man. (Jan.)