¶ … difficult to understand why Stephen L. Carter's The Emperor of Ocean Park has generated so much controversy since it was published at the beginning of the summer. That level of interest in his work stems from his taking on a position that is both unusual and provocative as Carter, through his protagonist, explores contemporary American political and academic life - and the nature of race, class, and power in the United States today.
The novel tells the story (which resembles the works of Grisham in his conspiracy/thriller model) of a chain of events that begin with the death of a conservative African-American lawyer named Oliver Garland. Although a good provider for his family and in many ways a decent person, Oliver is also emotionally demanding and withdrawn from his family. He is far more interested in using the personal power and personal connections (and wealth) that he already has to acquire more personal power and connections and wealth than he is interested in providing emotional support to his family.
Oliver Garland's life has to some extent been ruined by the fact that he has lost a chance to sit on the U.S. Supreme Court: We see in this character a combination of Robert Bork and Clarence Thomas, both conservative judges who were opposed in their attempt to gain the highest judicial position by those who believed that their conservative activism was not in keeping with the values either of the American public or of the U.S. Constitution. Of course, Bork was kept off the bench while Thomas was confirmed, perhaps in part because those liberals who opposed him were less stalwart in their attacks on a black man than they had been on a white man like Bork.
The maneuverings over how a Supreme Court position is gained (as described...
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