A review by washed_guapi_lee
Long Division by Kiese Laymon

adventurous challenging dark emotional funny hopeful inspiring mysterious reflective sad tense medium-paced
  • Plot- or character-driven? A mix
  • Strong character development? Yes
  • Loveable characters? Yes

5.0

Long Division is possibly the last book I will teach to a group of students for some time. It is the third time I have read Long Division, and the 2x w/ the revised & republished version. Last year I felt my young people had developed the independent skills to encounter it on their own, but they got lost in some of the complexities of the text, and it made me understand I had to revise the way I approached it with myself, and my students this year. More of them are loving on it and appreciating it this time around, and I can’t say enough about how much of a wonder and a reading experience this book is. Kiese’s description of characters, the uncompromising southern Blackness of it, the “messiness” of the timelines, the uniqueness of the 2013 City, LaVander, Grandma, Coach Stroud, MyMy, 1985 City, Shalaya, Baize, Evan, Rozier, and Mama Lara, and all the questions and portals it asks of us as readers is a work of a brilliant artist. The young people, this year, explored it through American history and organizing, communal love, racial violence, and choices in a society that hates its young. Overall, it is just hella fun and funny, and it is easily the greatest published novel of the last ten years. I know I may have named other texts in conversations or posts as the greatest, but right now, for me this is true. Long Division is a one of one treasure of literary arts, and we are all better on the other end due to Kiese’s genius.