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Between the Devil and the Deep Blue Sea

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

In the early 1970s, César Alvarez enlists in the navy to escape a life of crime; while the decision saves him from the streets, it also lands him amid volatile racial tensions at a crucial moment in US history.

"Skillfully blending his fictional hero's coming-of-age story with a real-life racial confrontation aboard ship, Carter's tale is a winning combination of military procedural, suspense, and Black history." —Booklist, Starred Review

"Taking its title from a nautical term for a conundrum, the novel is a coming-of-age and redemption story about two young Black men going through boot camp, training school and their first assignments in an early 1970s Navy struggling with racism and sexism." —The Oregonian

The Vietnam War is raging, the US Navy has only recently begun the process of integration, and the country is reeling from racial turmoil and unrest. So why does César, a street-tough kid of Afro-Cuban descent, enlist in the navy? He is on the run from a life of crime and from Mr. Mike, a charismatic, sociopathic gangster who was once a mentor but has now turned on him.

Escaping into a navy wrestling with its history of racism and sexism, César soon sees the absurdity of certain prejudices that seem as old as the US Armed Forces. When he is deployed aboard the USS Kitty Hawk, racial tensions are high and are moving quickly toward violence. Through it all, César's ever-growing sense of honor and self-worth force him to make moral decisions he never knew he was capable of. It's a fortitude he will desperately need.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      November 8, 2021
      Carter’s salty debut follows a U.S. Navy recruit who confronts racial division on his search for deliverance. In 1971, Cesar Alvarez, a 19-year-old Afro-Cuban growing up in Orlando, runs afoul of his boss, a vicious drug runner known as Mr. Mike, and decides his only ticket out is to join the Navy. In basic training, Cesar experiences prejudice within the ranks, and after he’s stationed in San Diego for signalman training, he begins a relationship with a female sailor, biracial Aida Hachi. Upon graduation, Cesar flies to Manila to await the arrival of the aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk on its way home from Vietnam. On board, Cesar notes that racial tensions are high, exacerbated by the fact that the carrier has received orders to return to Vietnam. To make matters worse, the long arm of Mr. Mike reaches out to take revenge on Cesar. A Navy veteran, the author displays intimate knowledge of the various signaling modes Cesar picks up, such as Morse code and flag semaphore. There’s some contrived plotting involving Mr. Mike, but Cesar makes for a durable hero. Overall, this is one of the most empathetic depictions of navy lifers since The Last Detail.

    • Kirkus

      December 15, 2021
      Which is more challenging, coming of age in the Navy or on the crime-ridden streets? November 1971. Orlando teenager C�sar Alvarez succumbs to the hard sell of a gritty petty officer named Segar and joins the Navy. The Afro-Cuban C�sar is hopeful of making a new life off the streets, where he works for the villainous Mr. Mike, a coldblooded killer and drug dealer who regularly calls him the N-word. The Navy is a whole new eye-opening world for C�sar, who nevertheless can't shake the fear that Mr. Mike will exact revenge. A casual meeting with fellow recruit Aida paves the way for romance. While there are welcome opportunities for advancement, like extensive travel and signalman school, C�sar also finds the everyday dangers of his neighborhood replaced by the subtler racism of the Navy. The measured plot takes the hero from Orlando to San Diego to Manila, where he's stationed aboard the Kitty Hawk, as the specter of the Vietnam War lurks ominously in the background and Mr. Mike hatches an elaborate plan to destroy C�sar. The strength of Carter's lean, straightforward prose, which mirrors C�sar's earnest, ethical nature and urges readers to root for him, and the authority of detail in his debut override some triteness of incident and character. A naval adventure thriller from recent history, told in a fresh, straightforward new voice.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

    • Booklist

      Starred review from November 1, 2021
      Cesar Alvarez needs to get out of Orlando quick after being tricked into squealing on local gang boss Mr. Mike. It's the fall of 1971, and the Vietnam War is in full swing, so Cesar takes the only surefire exit available, the local navy recruiting office. Soon he's on his way to basic training, a new career, and a new way of life. But Mr. Mike is offered a way out of his legal difficulties and ends up at the same destination. Carter's debut novel crackles with intensity as it describes Cesar's struggles and triumphs surviving the punishing cacophony of boot camp, the thrill of life aboard an aircraft carrier, his nagging terror and guilt over his history with Mr. Mike, and the treacherous racial dynamics of the civil-rights-era military. An Afro-Cuban, Cesar makes white friends for the first time and, despite several racist encounters, comes to believe that "the only color that matters is blue," until his posting aboard the USS Kitty Hawk reveals just how segregated the navy actually is. Skillfully blending his fictional hero's coming-of-age story with a real-life racial confrontation aboard ship, Carter's tale is a winning combination of military procedural, suspense, and Black history.

      COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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