Raised in the steamy bayous of New Orleans in the early 1900s, LeRoi
"King" Tremain, caught up in his family's ongoing feud with the rival
DuMont family, learns to fight. But when the teenage King mistakenly
kills two white deputies during a botched raid on the DuMonts, the
Tremains' fear of reprisal forces King to flee Louisiana.
King thus embarks on an adventure that first takes him to France, where
he fights in World War I as a member of the segregated 369th
Battalion--in the bigoted army he finds himself locked in combat with
American soldiers as well as with Germans. When he returns to America,
he battles the Mob in Jazz Age Harlem, the KKK in Louisiana, and crooked
politicians trying to destroy a black township in Oklahoma.
King Tremain is driven by two principal forces: He wants to be treated
with respect, and he wants to create a family dynasty much like the one
he left behind in Louisiana. This is a stunning debut by novelist Guy
Johnson that provides a true depiction of the lives of African-Americans
in the early decades of the twentieth century.