Summer is a great time to curl up with a good book. And whether
you're choosing titles on your own or with your reading group, you'll
find the summer's best paperbacks--including award winners and national bestsellers--at Vintage and Anchor Books.
Not a Day Goes by by E. Lynn Harris
National Bestseller
E. Lynn Harris's latest blockbuster bestseller brings together two characters who truly deserve each other and lets us watch the sexual pyrotechnics fly.
John "Basil" Henderson has always played the field, both as a professional football player and as an equal opportunity lover. After retiring his jersey for a thriving career as a sports agent, the dashing playboy is finally settling down, and getting married to his new love, Yancey Harrington Braxton. A fiercely driven, emerging Broadway star, blessed with radiant beauty and inimitable charm, Yancey would seem his ideal counterpart. But she is also an insatiable opportunist with a vicious streak, and when Yancey joins forces with her unconscionable mother, and unearths Basil's most carefully guarded secrets, she finds herself with more than she bargained for. Charged with narrative exuberance and lavish detail, Not A Day Goes By is further proof that nobody spins a sexy urban love story quite like award-winning writer E. Lynn Harris.
More great summer reading,
September, 1999
My lady, Yancey, changed my life.
Sometimes I think she saved my life. My name is John Basil Henderson and
I guess I'm what you call a former bad boy. I was the kind of dude who
was getting so much play, I needed to buy condoms by the barrel. About
two years ago, all that changed when I met Yancey Harrington Braxton the
day before Christmas at Rockefeller Center while skating with my
five-year-old nephew, Cade. Yancey walked right up and started a
conversation while flirting with both Cade and myself. I loved her
confidence. We were both smitten at her first hello. Yancey is, as the
young dudes would say, a "dime piece" ... a perfect ten.
When I met Yancey I was in the midst of a pre-midlife crisis. I
had just turned thirty-three and my childhood dream of playing pro
football was already over. Wasn't shit going right for me. I was
actually seeing a shrink, trying to figure out why I had such disdain
for both men and women while, at times, being sexually attracted to
both. I was spending too much time trying to get even with this mofo,
Raymond Tyler who didn't even know how strongly I felt about him. For
me, Raymond stood on that thin line between love and hate. There were so
many things I liked--no, loved--about him, but I also hated feeling that
way toward any man. It just wasn't right.
I had gone to the
doctor to face my past--a past that included my sexual molestation by a
much beloved uncle. I wrote that no good mofo a letter telling him how
he had screwed up my life with his sick ass, but the mofo died before I
could mail it. I was surprised at how writing shit down and talking out
loud about how I was feeling helped me. But the good doctor wasn't
excited about my relationship with Yancey, and when I disagreed, we
parted ways. It wasn't as if he said, "If you continue in the
relationship I can no longer see you, Mr. Henderson." I just
stopped going and he never called to see if I was okay. I guess he
didn't need the money.
There have been times in my life that
were so painful that I didn't think I could share them with another
living soul, but then that person walks into your life, and you don't
know whether to be afraid or feel relief. You don't know whether to be
afraid or feel relief. You don't know whether to run or stand still,
That was the way I felt about meeting Yancey. When I told her how my
father had raised me to believe that my mother was dead, which I later
found out was a total lie, Yancey held me tight and I felt her tears on
my naked shoulder. At times I feel as though I could tell her anything,
and then I remember she is a woman and wouldn't understand some of the
things I have been through and done. So, despite my bone-deep love for
Yancey, I've kept some secrets about myself she just wouldn't
understand.
My love for Yancey hit me hard. I guess that's the
way real love works. I love the way she makes me feel like I'm the only
man in a roomful of thousands. I love the way other men and women look
at us when we walk hand in hand into some of New York's finest
restaurants and nightclubs, or during our simple walks through Central
Park. I love watching her perform on the Broadway stage and in cabarets,
where Yancey charms both owners and patrons. I love the sound of her
singing, not only on the stage but in the bathroom, while she sits at
her vanity and brushes her hair.
But one of the things I love
the most about Yancey is that she reminds me of myself. I guess both of
us have taken so much shit from our families that we don't too kindly to
outsiders. We are each other's best friend. To the outside world we're
the diva and the dawg, but not with each other. Once I took her to
Athens, Georgia, for a college football game. After the game we went to
a sports bar for beer and chicken wings. The redheaded waitress with
colossal breasts was diggin' me. When she served us, ole girl bent down
so low I could smell her deodorant. Yancey definitely took note. So when
the waitress did one more dip and looked me directly in the eyes and
asked, "Can I git anything else for y'all?" Yancey stood up
and said, "Yes, you can git them fake titties out of my man's
face." That's my Yancey. Another time, shortly after we first
started dating and I was still keeping a few freaks on the side, Yancey
came over to spend the night. I came out of the shower expecting to see
her lying in my bed wearing something sexy but she was fully dressed.
When I asked her what was up, she told me, "I don't sleep in no bed
where I can smell another woman's perfume or pussy." I got the
message.
I had a gig doing sportscasting for a network, and when
I became fed up with the way they were treating me, Yancey convinced me
that I could do better. As we talked one evening while enjoying a late
supper, I realized I wanted a business that combined my love for sports
and making money. A couple of weeks later a former teammate called me
looking for additional capital to expand his small sports management
agency. I hadn't heard from Brison Tucker since the night the two of us
went out and got messed up big time after we were both chosen in the
first round of the NFL draft. Brison was injured after four years in the
league, and had spent several years working in Canada as a scout. A
couple of long dinners and months later, I was no longer a talking head
at ESPN doing second-rate college games but a partner of XJI (X Jocks
Inc.) one of the fastest-growing sports agencies in the country, with
offices in New York, Washington, D.C., and Atlanta, with over thirty
employees. The agency is looking to add another partner and open offices
in Chicago and Los Angeles.
Joining the XJI was the right move
at the right time. I had made some decent money with Internet stocks and
was looking for another investment. Instead of just handing over money,
I joined the firm as a partner. This year alone, XJI has six potential
number-one picks in the upcoming NFL draft as well as four NBA lottery
picks. I personally signed three of the players. The agency also has a
couple of NBA superstars who left their white agents and signed with us,
as well as a couple of WNBA players and some track and field hardheads.
I love what I do and I've rekindled some old friendships with my
partners and made new friends with some of the players I represent. I
feel a certain power when I make big-money deals for my clients,
especially since the money is coming from wealthy owners who view the
players as possessions. If these rich mofos want to play with my
players, then I make sure they pay major benjamins.
As for me,
myself, and I? We're rollin' like a bowling ball! I recently purchased a
penthouse loft on Lafayette Street with twenty-six-foot-high ceilings
and wood-burning fireplaces in both the living room and the master
bedroom. I got a closetful of finely tailored suits and I could go
months without wearing the same pair of draws or socks. Yancey and I
take vacations in places like Jamaica, Fisher Island, and Paris whenever
New York becomes too much of a grind. I'm doing better than I ever did
when I was playing professional football.
Still, the biggest
change in my life is the way I feel about women. With the love of Yancey
and my sister, Campbell, I have come to view women differently for the
very first time. I didn't know I had a sister until two years ago, just
before I met Yancey. Turns out my mom had remarried and on her deathbed
told Campbell she had a brother. She tracked me down, and suddenly I had
two new women in my life. Before, I'd never have let women get that
close to me.
In Campbell I see a woman determined to give her
son, Cade, and husband, Hewitt, the best she has to offer. Sometimes I
just like to watch her with Cade, feeding him french fries or making
sure his coat is buttoned up before he goes out into the cold. I love
the way she smiles and hugs him whenever he comes into a room, even when
he's only been gone for a short time.
There was a time in my
life when I had a lot of anger toward women. I put them in two
categories: whores and sluts. The only difference is, a whore gives up
the sex because she wants something material, whereas a slut just loves
the sex. I have been with both, but I didn't like the power pussy had
over me. Maybe my anger toward women happened because I grew up without
a mother, or because I simply hadn't met the right woman. Now, thanks to
Yancey and Campbell, I no longer view them as a resting place for my
manhood but a place where I can rest my heart. Now don't get me wrong, I
ain't whipped and I'm not ready for the choir robe and halo, I still got
my tough-guy-swagger (when needed). The only difference between two
years ago and today is I realize that a tough-guy swagger looks just as dumb as a robe and halo.
Excerpted from Not a Day Goes by by
E. Lynn Harris.
Copyright 2000 E. Lynn Harris. Excerpted by
permission of Anchor Books,
a division of Random House, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt
may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.
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