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Number's Up: Cracking the Code of an American Family [Kõva köide]

  • Formaat: Hardback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 386 g, 25 b&w illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: The University Press of Kentucky
  • ISBN-10: 198590232X
  • ISBN-13: 9781985902329
Teised raamatud teemal:
  • Formaat: Hardback, 272 pages, kõrgus x laius: 216x140 mm, kaal: 386 g, 25 b&w illus
  • Ilmumisaeg: 17-Jun-2025
  • Kirjastus: The University Press of Kentucky
  • ISBN-10: 198590232X
  • ISBN-13: 9781985902329
Teised raamatud teemal:
This compelling memoir uncovers the author’s family’ hidden past, tracing a father’s journey from World War II Navy service to the underground lottery in Washington, D.C., while examining the impact of incarceration, systemic racism and the resilience of Black communities across generations. Illustrations.

A piece of paper with a previously undisclosed truth has the power to bring you to your knees.

For four decades, Johnisha Matthews Levi believed a conventional story about her birth, picturing her happy parents at the hospital together. While sorting through her late mother's belongings, however, she discovered a document indicating that her father was instead serving time in Lorton Correctional Complex. This revelation, along with rumors about an FBI investigation of her deceased parents' "private business," leads Levi to unearth the hidden history of her family. She ties this story to public policy, demonstrating how state lottery legalization and the War on Drugs disrupted the Black institutions and communities in Washington, DC.

Levi's stirring memoir centers on her brilliant but troubled father, a Black World War II radioman who, facing economic barriers after his naval service, reinvents himself as a "numbers man" for an underground gambling operation. The job enables John Matthews to provide for his loved ones and to achieve a level of success far beyond his childhood dreams in the impoverished Jim Crow South. In the process, he becomes an indirect target of law enforcement.

By examining the circumstances of her father's incarceration, Levi explores how multiple generations of the Matthews family have been haunted by the specter of violence against Black people. Number's Up offers a unique but quintessentially American story of survival through ingenuity as it asks: Is forgiveness the sole means of moving forward?

Prologue: Independence Day
1. The Homecoming
2. Visiting Hours
3. The Investigation
4. The Lottery
5. Trouble Man
6. Alabama Days
7. The Secret Attic
8. Tidal Wave
9. Missing You
10. Real Estate
11. Code-switching
12. Nervous Conditions
13. Father, Father, We Don't Need to Escalate
14. The Numbers Up
15. Insufficient Funds
16. The Graduate
17. The Acquittal
18. The Evidence of Things Not Seen
19. The Graduate Redux
20. An Imperfect Mind
21. Basic Human Needs
22. Probation 1.0
23. Probation 2.0
24. Spirits in the Material World
25. Two Weddings
26. The Guardian
27. Bashert
28. The Diagnosis
29. Goodbye
30. Liberty Crest
Epilogue
Acknowledgements
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Articles
Plays

Johnisha Matthews Levi is a nonprofit development professional and former litigation attorney. Her writing has appeared in Wildsam, the kitchn, Northern Virginia Magazine, and Yes! Media.