'Chain Gang All-Stars' Tells the Story of Incarcerated People Fighting For Freedom... Literally
![](https://media.wnyc.org/i/800/0/l/85/2023/05/9780593317334.jpg)
( Pantheon Books )
[music]
Alison Stewart: This is All Of It on WNYC. I'm Allison Stewart. The critically acclaimed author of the short story collection, Friday Black, is out with this debut novel today. Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah's book, Chain-Gang All-Stars, is a tale set in a future, but certainly not unrecognizable United States when for-profit prisons take things to a whole new level. In the story, incarcerated people can enter to earn their freedom, but it takes a lot. There's a system called the Criminal Action Penal Entertainment Program, also known as CAPE, run by the private prison industry. Prisoners fight violently to the death in an arena, and the events are televised spectacles with corporate sponsorship.
In Adjei-Brenyah's story, the protagonist is Loretta Thurwar, and one of her main opponents is Hurricane Staxxx, who is also her lover. Loretta is so close to getting out. The question is, will she gain her freedom? If so, what happens next? Kirkus Reviews said of the book, "An acerbic, poignant, and, at times, alarmingly pertinent dystopian novel ravages two institutions: One involving privately owned mil prisons, the other feeding America's addiction to violent sports." Given the US has the highest incarceration rates in the world with almost 2 million people in prison at a given time, the book offers smart observations about this toxic chronic problem.
Chain-Gang All-Stars is out today. With me now is author and Bronx resident Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, who will also also be in conversation with Mitchell S Jackson at the Schaumberg Center tonight at 7:00 PM. I'm going to put you to work right away and get you to read the first page or so of the novel.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: I'm ready. Thank you so much. This is from the very beginning of the book, which we're not calling a prologue because some people don't read the prologue I've discovered, and that's really sad. It's called The Freeing of Melancholia Bishop. "She felt their eyes, all those executioners. 'Welcome young lady,' said Mickey Wright, the premiere announcer for Chain-Gang All-Stars, the crown jewel in the Criminal Action Penal Entertainment Program. 'Why don't you tell us your name?' His high boots were planted on the turf of the battleground, which was long and green stroked with cocaine, white hash marks like a divergent football field.
It was Super Bowl weekend. A fact that Wright was contractually obligated to mention between every match that evening. 'You know my name'. She noticed her own steadiness and felt a dim love for herself. Strange. She counted herself for wretched for so long, but the crowd seemed to appreciate her boldness. They cheered though their support was edged with a brutal irony. They looked down on this Black woman dressed in the gray jumpsuit of the incarcerated. She was tall and strong. They looked down on her and the tight coils of black hair on her head. They looked down gleefully. She was about to die. They believed this the way they believed in the sun and the moon and the air they breathed."
Alison Stewart: The not prologue. Yes.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Yes. Isn't that crazy?
Alison Stewart: How does that first scene-- It goes on for a couple of more pages, how does it really set us up for the story?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: It introduces us, first and foremost, to Loretta Thurwar, who's a novelist protagonist. It also introduces us to the sort of violent blood sport that is Chain-Gang All-Stars battlegrounds, which is one half of the program. The other half is called Chain-Gang All-Stars link life, which is more like a rare world where we follow these convicted people who have chosen to opt into this blood sport and in their regular life stuff. It sets up the bloody stakes, and just how dangerous and violent things are.
Alison Stewart: What is something that Loretta knows about herself and you as her creator that we the audience don't really know just yet?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: That's interesting, and I got to think to not spoil stuff. I think that she has awareness of-- I mentioned it a little bit here about her-- She has a big darkness that she's holding all the time. We see that darkness rupture into this desire to survive and become something else. She's holding a lot of secrets, but it's hard for me to say too many of them.
Alison Stewart: All right. She's holding secrets, so we have to keep that in mind. If you were to introduce her to someone for the first time, how would you describe her?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: I would describe her as a survivor. As someone who, despite her circumstances is moral, and someone who can contain many things at once. She contains multitudes, I'd say.
Alison Stewart: She is showered with glory and attention, but she's still incarcerated. She's still someone who is in prison. How does she feel about this? You're talking about being able to contain multitudes. How does she feel about this situation?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: When the novel starts, we're catching her-- After this prologue, we're catching her a couple of years into this bloody system. She's gone through many different stages of feeling. She's gone through the part where she's just terrified, and then she gotten past the part where she's embracing the celebrity and lavishing in the glory. Where we find her, for most of the books, she's looking back mournfully at what she's done and considering what she'll do next. She's in a place of, not exactly regret, but mournful reflection.
Alison Stewart: My guest is Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah. The name of the book is Chain-Gang All-Stars. Let's describe this fictional program that the novel's based around, CAPE, has its own set of rules, its own vocabulary. How does it function within the context of this version of the United States?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Yes. In the book, Chain-Gang All-Stars, convicted wards of state can opt out of a sentence of at least 25 years and participate in these death matches. If they survive on Circuit, which is the name for the seasons, they survive in this game for three years, they are awarded clemency. That's the ultimate motivation to participate. Again, of course the downside is they may at any time be killed with no penalty to the government or the programs that are administering this punishment.
It's about that system has become one of the most popular and most biggest growing sports in the country. We are following, particularly, Loretta Thurwar and Hamara Hurricane Staxxx Stacker, who were some of the most popular participants in this game.
Alison Stewart: As I mentioned in the intro, I'm not giving anything away, that they are lovers, not just opponents. What do they see in each other?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: I think that in each other, they see each other. A part of why I had Staxxx when I was creating Staxxx and felt she has to be a woman is I needed someone who could understand Thurwar completely. Thurwar is as a champion and someone who has committed these atrocities because of the sport, but also she's a Black woman who is in the limelight. I think we know that there's a particular edge of both exalt and meanness. There's a way that I think Black women are often held up, but also try to be pulled down all at once. I think that Staxxx is one of the few people who could completely understand Thurwar in that way and vice versa
Alison Stewart: In this world that you're creating, you didn't create a completely fantastic world. One that we couldn't imagine or that or we'd have to fully use our imagination to be in. Why did you decide to pick a world which is imaginable?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: That's my lane. I think I like to think about what is in front of us and extrapolate just a little bit towards the future, but not inflecting too much of my own whimsy. Really thinking about the fundamental moral, ethical stance we're assuming. Basically, we know that in our current constitution, slavery's protected explicitly in the case of convicted criminals as maybe has been made famous by Avery Dene in the-
Alison Stewart: 13th.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: 13th. If that's the case, there's a lot on the table. I'm saying, "Well, okay, if that's fine, what about this?" We already know in America it's okay for people to profit off the incarceration of human beings. If that's okay, then what about this? Where is your moral ethical line? I'm saying it doesn't really exist. That's really why I try to keep things familiar because the point I'm trying to make I think most is that already we're in a space that is completely devoid of compassion. Already we're in a space that is inhumane by any real standard.
Alison Stewart: There's a whole lot of corporate sponsorship around. All I kept thinking about was that-- I think I remembered this from maybe last time we talked is you used to work in a mall. [laughs]
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Yes, I did.
Alison Stewart: Up in Black Palisades.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: I remember, yes. I think 13, I believe, is the exit.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: It is. Wow. Yes.
Alison Stewart: What from that experience about consumerism and the way people like to buy things was useful for you in writing that part of this story?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Yes. My first book, Friday Black, the titular story, I'll use that word because I learned it at conferences and I like to say it because it's not smart. The titular story.
[laughter]
Friday Black was about zombified shoppers who are willing to do anything to get jeans or brand name jack, or whatever. I think that a lot of that book, and also a lot of my interest is driven by the different systems that get us to forget each other's humanity. I think in a corporate capitalism, material gain and profit is seen as almost the most holy motivator of all. In our current system, it's a thing that happens all the time that humans are disregarded in favor of making profits. I'm always been interested in that. I can see it on maybe personal level, but also on a systemic level.
Sometimes I think that we're almost infected with the systemic attitudes. That's what the Friday Black was. I put that same energy. I think that same energy exists, I didn't have to put it there in our attitude towards prisoners and prison labor, which is effectively slave labor.
Alison Stewart: This book, actually, the novels started out as part of when you were working on that collection, right?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Yes, that's right.
Alison Stewart: As a writer, when do you know, "All right, this thing is going to outgrow its parameters as a short story?"
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: It's a long, painful process. For someone like me, it's you're trying to jam a square into a circle and it just doesn't work. In my heart of hearts, I really love the short story form. I love feeling like every single word feels purposeful. When I started writing what would become this book, I had the idea of this woman in the eye of the arena, speaking to the crowds and that mournful reflection I was talking about.
I was just so interested in her voice. I was so interested in what she was looking back on. I started to think, "Let's see." I did some research and once I started doing the research, I was like, "This is a lot. This is an iceberg that I think I need to try to explore more of," whereas, oftentimes, I can feel satisfied with getting the tip of the iceberg. This time, I needed to explore it fully.
Alison Stewart: What research were you doing; into prison system, into women and athletes, into women who excel?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Into many of those things, particularly into prisons, but also into sports, organizations too. I remember reading this legal document called What Is The NBA? The answer is actually not legally that obvious. It's a very strange, because it's many, several businesses that are working together as one business, but they're not exactly one business either.
Thinking about all these basically groups of super-rich men who are doing this thing that's just for them, things like that, but mostly looking into prisons, the history of prison in America and abroad, the direct connections between slavery and our carceral system and things like this.
Alison Stewart: My guess is Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah, the name of the new novel is Chain Gang All-Stars. You dedicate the book to your late father, who was, at one point, a defense attorney and you write, "There's nothing quite like helping someone in need." He said this. "There's nothing quite like helping someone in need, nothing quite like it." Is he a voice in your head when you write, or is he just a voice in your head all the time, honestly?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: He's a voice in my head in probably too many ways. My father is a Ghanaian immigrant as my mom. Anytime I get anything that I can, my mind is not a plus, plus, plus, plus. I hear him saying, "Not good enough." Also, I hear him saying, "You should try your best." If you have the ability to help someone, you should. In some ways, I'm pretty grateful for that voice in my head.
Alison Stewart: In the book, there are also footnotes throughout the book. What went into that creative decision?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Again, another painstaking one. I can't say I'm someone who loved the idea of having footnotes. To me, they break the fictive dream. I remember reading the John Gardner, Art of Fiction. His whole thing was, never break that fictive dream. That felt like a core tenet of my approach to being an artist. Because of the nature of this book, there is violence, there is, I don't know, these big set pieces that could be very entertaining.
I wanted it to be impossible to divorce the action and "fun of the book" from the very real human atrocity that is happening every single day through the American carceral system. I wanted that to be unmissable, but also I wanted to break the-- I think, artistically, I was interested in the challenge of making this thing that I felt artistically repulsed by one of the more fun elements of the book.
I wanted to break the linearity, the linear nature of the sentence and see if I could have fun with making my pros jump around a little bit. There's a lot of different reasons, but at first, I was, even though it was my idea, I was very hesitant to do it. Then eventually became, I think one of the hallmarks of the book.
Alison Stewart: There's a section in the book because these spectacles are televised. It's for reality TV shows you mentioned and the corporation sponsor these death matches. There's this scene where this character, Tracy Lasser, she is supposed to be giving a report on it on Sports Central. I'm going to read what she goes off script, shall we say? She says, "'Funny thing is,' Tracy said, and immediately she felt the energy in the room shift, 'I know Hurricane Stacks very well. She was a great friend of mine. We called her Hammy. She was one of the best athletes I've ever known. What she's doing now with this program is telling you is sports is not sports. I wanted to be part of this program to talk about achievement, not murder, not lynching, not death. In the past few months, this program I've dreamed of being a part of for years has adopted the practice of airing exactly that, murder, lynching, death. I hoped it would be a phase that would quickly pass. I was wrong. Shame on you, Sports Central. My name is Tracy Lasser.'" Then it says that now the clips were over and the camera had no choice but to blink back to her. "I stand in solidarity with those around the country who have demonstrated against so-called hard-action sports."
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: That was great. Thank you for that.
Alison Stewart: Thank you. I got into it. What is it that you want us to think about corporate media and its role in all of this?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: It's a really great question. Again, I wrote a lot of this before the former America president was elected, but I think we all have a responsibility to call out evil when we see it, to not be just blind to the wrong that's changing right in front of our eyes. I think Tracy demonstrates the very brave act of going against the corporate push. Again, it's perhaps to her own detriment, financially anyways, to do the right thing.
I think that we see that's rare. I think that's the thing that happens very rarely. There are people who do it and it's something to be admired. Jemele Hill is coming to my mind right now off the top of my head. There's people who do it and they are punished for it. Even when they're punished for it, I think that the response to them being punished is not strong enough either. We should support them more readily and more strongly.
In so many ways, we're also afraid of that, getting stomped out, not getting the endorsement deal, just being afraid of not having access to materials, material wealth. She demonstrates someone who's pushing back against the corporate overlord or whatever you want to call it, really trying her best to not just be a simply a cog in a machine and it's something to be admired, I think.
Alison Stewart: Some of the scenes of the fights get a little gruesome.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: A lot of gruesome.
Alison Stewart: I was glad we still-- If we kept going with those first few pages, you'd get a taste of it being beautifully written, but it's gruesome. Some of it is. How did you think about writing those scenes so that they tell the story, also, they're entertaining but that so they're don't fall into being gratuitous?
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: It's a very important question that is, I guess intimately one of the questions I always have to ask myself. I myself am pretty squeamish. I'm not really interested in super violent horror despite the way I write. I think that my sensitivity to that kind of violence is exactly why it shows up in my work so much. We all have this attitude towards the gallows, and people getting hanged. That's so crazy and antiquated.
I recently watched a video by a YouTube named Jacob Geller about the false evolution of capital punishment and how before the gallows, they might quarter people, four horses. Then that became really, well that's so terrible. Then you get the gallows, then you get that you-- There's a step between that electric chair. Now we're starting to look at the electric chair like, oh that seems pretty-- That seems wrong because it's not just quick electricity sometimes people-
Alison Stewart: Language.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: -burst into flame. Sometimes you'll do over and over again. Now we have this false idea that the lethal injection is painless. It is not. I guess what I'm saying is that we lit-- The American government kills people, and it is very gruesome no matter how we try to dress it up. More than that, the extra-judicial murder of people by the police is very gruesome.
It feels like I had to capture that the gruesomeness that is humans killing humans in some way. I chose to make it entertaining because I knew that's how a corporates place that was trying to make money off of it would. That's what they would do to profit. I couldn't pretend that the act of killing humans isn't gruesome. For me, that was important to capture.
Alison Stewart: Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah's new book is called Chain-Gang All-Stars. It is out today. He'll be speaking tonight at the Schaumburg Center with Mitchell S. Jackson at 7:00 PM. Thank you for sharing a part of your Pub Day with us.
Nana Kwame Adjei-Brenyah: Thank you. This is my first up Pub Day event, so it's absolutely my pleasure. Thank you again.
Alison Stewart: There's more All Of It on the way. Next hour, we'll talk about the Tony Award nominations in about 20 minutes. W. Kamau Bell will be our guest. His new documentary is called 1000% Me: Growing Up Mixed. Premiers tonight on HBO. Stay with us.
Copyright © 2023 New York Public Radio. All rights reserved. Visit our website terms of use at www.wnyc.org for further information.
New York Public Radio transcripts are created on a rush deadline, often by contractors. This text may not be in its final form and may be updated or revised in the future. Accuracy and availability may vary. The authoritative record of New York Public Radio’s programming is the audio record.