“Watching them pleased young eyes. I loved their complexions and freckles, the fullness and weight of their hair and its different colors—its flow when quick hands pushed it off their foreheads, or fingers combed it effortlessly—their eyes whose colors were hypnotic, and the freshness of their shirts or suits even at the end of long days.”

The One Who's Gonna See You Through

The One Who’s Gonna See You Through is a work that bridges the commercial/literary divide.

The gay interracial theme here is seldom explored and the absent mother/loving father configuration brings a different lens to this work. The approach to the story in The One Who’s Gonna See You Through sets the more familiar trope of the angry, Black, homophobic father aside and abandons the more well-trodden storyline of steadfast single Black motherhood. By the story’s end, GJ recognizes that his father’s early and invaluable acceptance of difference laid the foundations for the happiness and realization he has experienced as a gay man throughout life. He resolves within himself that he must finally accept his legitimacy as both a Black man and an upper-middle-class one.

"The One Who's Gonna See You Through"
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Where confidence and self-affirmation were always with me concerning sexuality, they abandoned me for decades within my depths where I engaged feelings of inequality or inferiority pertaining to race or class.