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đ I Am Not Sidney Poitier by Percival Everett â A Satirical, Surreal, and Brilliantly Absurd Journey Into Identity
Now and then, I stumble upon a book that doesnât just speakâit winks. It nudges. It twists my expectations into a knot and dares me to untangle them. I Am Not Sidney Poitier by Percival Everett is exactly that kind of book.
Itâs weird in all the right ways. Hilarious and sharp. Bizarre but intentional. And deeply, uncomfortably honest in how it probes the question: Who gets to decide who we are?
As a woman who reads to uncover layersânot just in characters but in the worldâI found myself captivated by this storyâs unique blend of satire, surrealism, and philosophical playfulness. Itâs one of those novels that makes you laugh, then flinch, then laugh againâbecause the truth itâs pointing at is anything but funny.
đ What Is I Am Not Sidney Poitier About? (Without Spoilers)
The book follows a man namedâyesâNot Sidney Poitier, a young Black man burdened with a bizarre name and a life that seems to echo the iconic actorâs most famous film roles. After the death of his mother, Not Sidney inherits a massive fortune and is taken in by the eccentric billionaire Ted Turner (yes, the actual Ted Turner… sort of).
From there, things unravel in the most gloriously absurd ways. Not Sidney is thrown into surreal encounters with racist institutions, academic nonsense, and people who constantly try to define him through the lens of who they think he should be. He even meets a professor named Percival Everett (yes, again, sort of) who teaches âNonsense Philosophyâ and dishes out cryptic guidance like a Zen master whoâs read too much Nietzsche.
Along the way, Not Sidney keeps slipping into moments that feel eerily like scenes from Sidney Poitierâs films. And through these moments, Everett builds a sharp, hilarious, and heartbreaking meditation on what it means to be a Black man in a world obsessed with labels.
đ Mood, Tone, and Themes: A Carnival of the Mind
Reading I Am Not Sidney Poitier feels like stepping into a hall of mirrorsâeach chapter reflecting some distorted truth about race, class, identity, or absurdity. Itâs funny, yes, but not light. Thereâs weight in its wit.
đ§© Race and Societal Expectations
Everett skewers the way Black identity is often flattened into digestible clichĂ©s for white comfort or commercial gain. Not Sidney isnât just navigating his worldâheâs constantly being narrated by others, reduced, reimagined, redefined.
It made me pause more than once and think about how often weâre all cast into roles we never auditioned for.
đ§ The Philosophy of Nonsense
Everett doesnât just critique societyâhe questions the very meaning of meaning. What is nonsense? What is identity? What does it mean to be anything in a world where absurdity feels like the norm?
If this sounds lofty, donât worryâitâs wrapped in the most entertaining, tongue-in-cheek packaging. Think Kafka meets Dave Chappelle.
đ€ The Search for Self
Not Sidneyâs journey isnât just externalâitâs a quiet scream from within. Who am I when everyone thinks they already know? When does every conversation feel like a costume fitting?
That struggle hit home for meâbecause havenât we all, at some point, felt like we were being seen for someone weâre not?
đŹ How the Book Made Me Feel
Honestly? I felt off-balance. And I loved it.
Some chapters made me laugh so hard that I had to put the book down. And others that left me staring at the page, the humour curdled, the message cutting through.
What I adored most was how playful the novel is. Even its deepest critiques come laced with a wink. Everett isnât here to preachâheâs here to perform a dazzling act of intellectual mischief, and weâre lucky enough to be in the audience.
đ§ Who Should Read I Am Not Sidney Poitier?
If youâre a fan of clever, genre-defying fiction that mixes social satire with existential riddles, you need this book on your shelf.
If youâve ever felt like you donât fit into the boxes the world tries to place you inâthis book will speak to you. Loudly. And with wit.
If you loved novels like The Sellout by Paul Beatty, Invisible Man by Ralph Ellison, or even Catch-22âI Am Not Sidney Poitier, it belongs in your hands.
And if youâre simply looking for a story thatâs unlike anything youâve read beforeâthis is it.
đĄ Final Thoughts
Percival Everettâs I Am Not Sidney Poitier is more than a satirical novel. Itâs a mind-bending, laugh-out-loud, gut-check of a book that dares us to question how we see ourselvesâand how the world insists on seeing us.
Itâs about race, yes. But also about freedom. About naming. About absurdity and control. It asks: What happens when your identity is a joke the world wonât stop telling?
It left me shaken. Grinning. Enlightened in ways I didnât expect. And most of all, it reminded me why I read: not just to find comfort but to find truth in chaos.
If this sounds like your kind of story⊠please read it. Youâll never forget it.
đ đ ByOneClick â One Click, Endless Stories.