What We’re Reading: The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead

The Nickel Boys by Colson Whitehead
Available at the Main Campus Library

This book was read by Meredith Lewis, Orange County Campus Librarian. 

Title: The Nickel Boys

Author: Colson Whitehead

Genre: Historical Fiction

#ReadGreatThings2019 Category: A book suggested by a Durham Tech librarian

Also Ekpe Udoh’s October 2019 Book Club pick


Why did you chose to read this book? 

I read a Time Magazine interview with Colson Whitehead and had also read an article about the boy’s school in Florida on which he based the book. The final quote from a man who had been there really struck me [bolding is mine and not from the article]:

“Why would you make a fiction book — this is just me — out of something so horrible?” asked Jerry Cooper, 74, of Fort Myers, Fla., who served time at the reformatory school in 1961 as a teenager and says he was once whipped with the strap 135 times. “But I will get the book. I am going to read it. No matter how the word gets out about what happened at the school, it should just get out. I appreciate [Whitehead] doing the story.”

Overall, it seemed like an interesting book on a horrible topic.

I’ve also enjoyed Whitehead’s writing before in Underground Railroad [available in the Main and Orange County Campus Libraries]. And it was short, which sometimes ups the appeal for me, especially for a heavy topic.

What did you like about it? 

I’m not going to lie– this book was brutal at times. Elwood is such a good kid and it’s so deeply unfair how he ends up at Nickel Academy, but the strong, supportive friendship that’s at the center of this book between Elwood and Turner, two boys in terrible circumstances, is incredibly touching. I also liked that the book switches back and forth in time (clearly and in a well-organized way, if you care about that detail structurally). It wasn’t a hopeful book, but it does highlight the long-standing impact of trauma, even in people who are successful. 

Did it remind you of any other book or movie?

If you’re looking for similar fiction stories, I’d recommend either Tommy Orange’s There There or Yaa Gyasi’s Homegoing— both excellent books about how history ties into the present. 

 If you’re looking for something similar of the nonfiction variety, I’d recommend Killers of the Flower Moon or Radium Girls— this story is at its heart about bringing to light cruelty that was allowed to go on far too long by people in power. 

I enthusiastically recommend all four of these books. 

Dear Students, Faculty, and Staff– Please do not bring your bag of snakes to the library. Thank you.

It (probably?) should go without saying that snakes and other pets are not allowed in the Durham Tech Library, but just in case you were wondering, based on a pretty popular news article going around lately, service animals must be approved as per college policy. Snakes are not approved service animals. 


If you want to know more about snakes and other animals, check out books in call letter S (for some specific domestic animals) and QL (for animals galore!), including some of the awesome picks below: 

Notable News from the Library

New APA citation manual coming soon! The 7th edition will bring exciting changes such as:

  • Single-space after periods!*
  • No running headers!
  • Accessibility guidelines!
  • Bias-free language guidelines!

And much more!

APA Publication Manual, 7th edition: The Official Guide to APA Style

We know you’re as excited as we are.


Noted literary critic Harold Bloom has died. The Durham Tech Libraries have over 350 titles in which he was a contributor, author, or editor.

According to his NPR obituary, 

Bloom had a photographic memory, and claimed he could recite all of Shakespeare, all of John Milton’s “Paradise Lost” and copious swaths of British Romantic poetry. He was widely respected in mid-20th-century literary circles,but over the years, he fell out of fashion, in large part for his outspoken disdain for fellow scholars who he deemed “resentniks” —Deconstructionists, feminists and multiculturalists, whose cultural politics,he felt, minimized the genius of the writers he lionized.


 Jenny Lawson, also known as The Bloggess and the author of Let’s Pretend This Never Happened and Furiously Happy [available at the Main Campus Library], who is best known for her humorous takes on struggling with mental illnesses and love of weird taxidermy, is opening a bookshop in San Antonio called Nowhere Bookshop:

“Featuring new books, author events, unique gifts, and a coffee, wine and beer bar Nowhere Bookshop aims to be a space for folks to gather to share their passion for the written word.”

Nowhere Bookshop

* I’m telling you right now that you will pry my double-space after a period from my cold, dead, typing-class trained** fingers.

** Oxford Comma forever!