REVIEW
Thank you #partner @simonbooks #simonbooksbuddy for my #gifted copy, and @laurensbookvibes for the buddy read!💕
The Weight
Jeff Boyd
The Weight is a compelling coming-of-age debut that follows a twenty-something Black man named Julian. Originally from Chicago, and raised in an ultra-conservative Christian home, Julian is married and divorced by the age of twenty four. Following his divorce, he moves to Portland, Oregon to drum in a rock band, and get out from under the thumb of his sheltered upbringing. But things aren't all gravy in Portland, the "whitest big city in the US," as Julian navigates love, friendship, and religion as a Black man in a white world. Sometimes the weight seems too heavy to carry.
As a born-and-raised Oregonian, who came-of-age in the Portland music scene, it was a no-brainer that I'd read this one. Though as Julian is Black and I am white, my experience coming-of-age here was much different, as Julian faces racism and microaggressions at every turn. And yet I still felt so much familiarity (and sometimes nostalgia) in Julian's story.
Teeming with quintessential Portland hipster culture, and the oh-so-relatable experience of a directionless twenty-something, The Weight's biggest strength is how very realistic it feels: the dialogue, the navigation of friendships amongst immature, self-centered people, and the feelings of loneliness and being untethered. The introspection, the people who come and go, the downward spiral resulting from bad decisions, bad luck, and a lack of direction, with the added struggles of being Black in Portland, with a lack of true community — The Weight is a masterful execution of its portrayal of a young Black musician bobbing and weaving through his twenties, and I'd absolutely recommend it for folks who enjoy character driven coming-of-age novels.
🎧 I read along with the audiobook, courtesy of @libby.app and my local library. Narrator JD Jackson really captures the essence of Julian's character and story.
📌 Available now