This Morning My Father Died... So What?
SKU: 95946561640

This Morning My Father Died... So What?

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This Morning My Father Died... So What?This Morning My Father Died So What? Carlton Thomas is a man reflecting on his life growing up in a single parent home. Raised by his mother, he and his three sisters struggle both physically with poverty and emotionally from a father who lives nonchalantly nearby and neglects to show them the love and attention they long for. His fathers death precipitates painful memories he thought were long pushed aside and tests the Christian upbringing and


This Morning My Father Died... So What?

Carlton Thomas is a man reflecting on his life growing up in a single-parent home. Raised by his mother, he and his three sisters struggle both physically with poverty and emotionally from a father who lives nonchalantly nearby and neglects to show them the love and attention they long for. His fathers death precipitates painful memories he thought were long pushed aside and tests the Christian upbringing and lessons of forgiveness taught by his mother.

Carltons story, though written as fiction, is a troubling indictment of absentee fathers and the emotional pain they inflict upon their children, especially their sons, who grow to manhood and become fathers without any good role models of their own.

About the Author

Charles N. Smith was born and raised in Petersburg, Virginia and currently lives in Orangeburg, South Carolina. He attended Virginia Commonwealth University, in Richmond, Virginia and Virginia Polytechnic and State University in Blacksburg, Virginia. Mr. Smith is married and has four children and two granddaughters. He is an active member of the 100 Black Men where one of their national programs mentors young boys and girls. The main character in his book exposes the issues of young boys growing up in single-family homes without the imprint of the fathers who made them. Early on in his career, Mr. Smith worked as a counselor in a home for boys who were wards of the Juvenile Court System. He learned firsthand how some young boys felt about their absentee fathers and how they often missed that father and son relationship. Mr. Smith is the author of three other books: On the Sideline or In the Game (2002), A Funeral, A Wedding and the Journey Between (2005) and The Last Shall Be the First (2008).

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SKU: 95946561640

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Steven A. Breedlove
Los Angeles, US
★★★★★ 5
Eye-Opening and Heart-Expanding
Format: Paperback
I am incredibly grateful for this book. It gave me profound insight into essential truths of Christian faith and doctrine by allowing me to see them through a radically different lens than my internal lens. Plus, it opened me up enormously to the experience of black Americans who express the pain and challenge of life in our country thoughtfully and provocatively. I left this reading chastened, desiring more conversation, moved to listen better, and hoping to live differently.
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Reviewed in the United States on December 9, 2023
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Verified Purchase
Bruce Hillyer
Massapequa, US
★★★★★ 5
Best book I've read in last 10 years!
Format: Paperback
I'm absolutely blown away. I finished the book this morning. I have been recommending it to anyone and everyone who asks me "So, what you reading?". I'm known for having a book stack a mile high. I ran out of my first yellow highlighter! Profound stuff. The subtitle, How African American Literature Can Make Our Faith More Whole and Just, doesn't do the book justice. It is soooo much more. I highly recommend!
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Reviewed in the United States on March 28, 2023
J
J. Brooke Chao
Houston, US
★★★★★ 5
A must read
Format: Paperback
This is an amazing book! The author takes the reader through several works of black literature, expounding on how each work shows us deep things about theology and faith.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 3, 2025
J
jdmangrum
Pawtucket, US
★★★★★ 5
Countee Cullen chapter
Format: Paperback
This book is a great read. I’m not even sure how to encapsulate my thoughts on it, but let me say the chapter, “Jesus,” on the poetry of Countee Cullen is brilliant and a masterclass on discipleship, suffering, identity, projecting onto Jesus. This one chapter could literally be a course in Christian discipleship handling multiple aspects of the life of faith. I feel like I’m not doing the chapter, the book, or Claude Atcho justice here, but I deeply recommend this book and urge readers to really sit with the Cullen chapter and all its implications. What a gift Claude Atcho has given us here!
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Reviewed in the United States on January 21, 2025
E
Erin Straza
Waukegan, US
★★★★★ 5
An exceptional, stunningly beautiful, and greatly needed book
Format: Paperback
Have you ever finished a book so heavy with truth and beauty and goodness that you don’t know how to sum it up? That’s where I am upon completing Claude Atcho’s Reading Black Books: How African American Literature Can Make Our Faith More Whole and Just. I’m the sort who marks up books with notes, underlining, and asterisks. Pages with ideas I want to return to get a folded corner. For this book? More pages are folded than not and a flip through the book reveals copious amounts of fuchsia markings. Full disclosure: Claude is a writer friend; we’ve chatted about faith, books, work, writing, and podcasting. I’ve been eagerly awaiting the release of his book, knowing it would be fantastic. You might think I was biased in that assumption, considering our previous connection, considering I received an ARC from Brazos Press. What I found from the first pages was even more than expected: my friend as pastor, shepherd, prophet, counselor, guide. Claude features 10 key creative African American works to cast a vision for human flourishing rooted in the power and love of God found in Jesus Christ. Just listen to this moving excerpt: “Healing is found in the constant individual and communal turn toward the tender mercies of God, who calls us to a theological remembrance: to locate our history in his, to make sense of our memory in his memory, to process our wounds in his wounds” (126). This book is beautifully written, theologically robust, and desperately needed. I cannot recommend this book highly enough. It is stunning.
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Reviewed in the United States on May 17, 2022

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