From New Yorker staff writer and Harvard historian Jill Lepore, the
dark, spellbinding tale of her restless search for the missing longest
book ever written, a century-old manuscript called "The Oral History of
Our Time."
Joe Gould's Teeth is a Poe-like tale of detection, madness, and
invention. Digging through archives all over the country, Lepore
unearthed evidence that "The Oral History of Our Time" did in fact once
exist. Relying on letters, scraps, and Gould's own diaries and
notebooks--including volumes of his lost manuscript--Lepore argues that
Joe Gould's real secret had to do with sex and the color line, with
modernists' relationship to the Harlem Renaissance, and, above all, with
Gould's terrifying obsession with the African American sculptor Augusta
Savage. In ways that even Gould himself could not have imagined, what
Gould wrote down really is a history of our time: unsettling and
ferocious.