Harlem Shuffle

by

Colson Whitehead

Miami Joe is the mastermind behind the Hotel Theresa heist. A Black Florida native who fled north after some other crime, Miami Joe specializes in armed robbery. He recruits Freddie, Arthur, and Pepper to rob the Hotel Theresa using inside information obtained from Betty, an employee. Miami Joe dislikes the pretensions of Black New Yorkers and ultimately double-crosses his accomplices.

Miami Joe Quotes in Harlem Shuffle

The Harlem Shuffle quotes below are all either spoken by Miami Joe or refer to Miami Joe. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Crime, Class, and Social Mobility Theme Icon
).
Part 1, Chapter 4 Quotes

He measured his prison time in terms not of years lost but of scores missed. The city! And all its busy people and the sweet things they held dear in safes and vaults, and his delicate talent for seducing these items away. He’d bought farmland in Pennsylvania through a white lawyer and it was waiting for him, this green wonder. Arthur put the pictures the lawyer sent him up in his cell. His cellmate asked him what the hell it was, and he told him it was where he’d grown up. Arthur had grown up in a Bronx tenement fighting off rats every night, but when he finally retired to the nice clapboard house, he’d run through the grass like he was a kid again. Every hammer blow like he was busting through city concrete to the living earth below.

Related Characters: Freddie, Pepper, Miami Joe, Arthur
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 5 Quotes

The man had a point, more than he knew. For Carney was not a fence.

Yes, a percentage of his showroom was stolen. TVs, radios back when he could still unload them, tasteful modern lamps, and other small appliances in perfect condition. He was a wall between the criminal world and the straight world, necessary, bearing the load. But when it came to precious metals and gems, he was more of a broker.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Freddie, Miami Joe, Buxbaum
Related Symbols: Furniture Store, Necklaces
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 9 Quotes

About a month later Carney received a package. He got an odd feeling and closed his office door and drew the blinds to the showroom. Inside the box, wrapped in newspaper like a fish, was Miss Lucinda Cole’s necklace. The ruby glared at him, a mean lizard eye. Pepper’s handwriting was childish. The note said, “You can split this with your cousin.” He didn’t. He sat on it for a year to let the heat die down. Buxbaum paid him and Carney put the money away for the apartment. “I may be broke sometimes, but I ain’t crooked,” he said to himself. Although, he had to admit, perhaps he was.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Freddie, Pepper, Miami Joe, Chink Montague, Buxbaum, Lucinda Cole
Related Symbols: Necklaces
Page Number: 103
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 4 Quotes

Carney remembered Pepper taking him on his hunt for Miami Joe, the fronts and hideouts the crook had exposed during their search for the double-crosser. That time, places Carney had never seen before were suddenly rendered visible, like caves uncovered by low tide, branching into dark purpose. They’d never not been there, offering a hidden route to the underworld. This tour with Munson on his rounds took Carney to places he saw every day, establishments on his doorstep, places he’d walked by ever since he was a kid, and exposed them as fronts. The doorways were entrances into different cities—no, different entrances into one vast, secret city. Ever close, adjacent to all you know, just underneath. If you know where to look.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Pepper, Detective Munson, Miami Joe
Related Symbols: Furniture Store
Page Number: 252-253
Explanation and Analysis:
Get the entire Harlem Shuffle LitChart as a printable PDF.
Harlem Shuffle PDF

Miami Joe Quotes in Harlem Shuffle

The Harlem Shuffle quotes below are all either spoken by Miami Joe or refer to Miami Joe. For each quote, you can also see the other characters and themes related to it (each theme is indicated by its own dot and icon, like this one:
Crime, Class, and Social Mobility Theme Icon
).
Part 1, Chapter 4 Quotes

He measured his prison time in terms not of years lost but of scores missed. The city! And all its busy people and the sweet things they held dear in safes and vaults, and his delicate talent for seducing these items away. He’d bought farmland in Pennsylvania through a white lawyer and it was waiting for him, this green wonder. Arthur put the pictures the lawyer sent him up in his cell. His cellmate asked him what the hell it was, and he told him it was where he’d grown up. Arthur had grown up in a Bronx tenement fighting off rats every night, but when he finally retired to the nice clapboard house, he’d run through the grass like he was a kid again. Every hammer blow like he was busting through city concrete to the living earth below.

Related Characters: Freddie, Pepper, Miami Joe, Arthur
Page Number: 49
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 5 Quotes

The man had a point, more than he knew. For Carney was not a fence.

Yes, a percentage of his showroom was stolen. TVs, radios back when he could still unload them, tasteful modern lamps, and other small appliances in perfect condition. He was a wall between the criminal world and the straight world, necessary, bearing the load. But when it came to precious metals and gems, he was more of a broker.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Freddie, Miami Joe, Buxbaum
Related Symbols: Furniture Store, Necklaces
Page Number: 59
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 1, Chapter 9 Quotes

About a month later Carney received a package. He got an odd feeling and closed his office door and drew the blinds to the showroom. Inside the box, wrapped in newspaper like a fish, was Miss Lucinda Cole’s necklace. The ruby glared at him, a mean lizard eye. Pepper’s handwriting was childish. The note said, “You can split this with your cousin.” He didn’t. He sat on it for a year to let the heat die down. Buxbaum paid him and Carney put the money away for the apartment. “I may be broke sometimes, but I ain’t crooked,” he said to himself. Although, he had to admit, perhaps he was.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Freddie, Pepper, Miami Joe, Chink Montague, Buxbaum, Lucinda Cole
Related Symbols: Necklaces
Page Number: 103
Explanation and Analysis:
Part 3, Chapter 4 Quotes

Carney remembered Pepper taking him on his hunt for Miami Joe, the fronts and hideouts the crook had exposed during their search for the double-crosser. That time, places Carney had never seen before were suddenly rendered visible, like caves uncovered by low tide, branching into dark purpose. They’d never not been there, offering a hidden route to the underworld. This tour with Munson on his rounds took Carney to places he saw every day, establishments on his doorstep, places he’d walked by ever since he was a kid, and exposed them as fronts. The doorways were entrances into different cities—no, different entrances into one vast, secret city. Ever close, adjacent to all you know, just underneath. If you know where to look.

Related Characters: Raymond Carney, Pepper, Detective Munson, Miami Joe
Related Symbols: Furniture Store
Page Number: 252-253
Explanation and Analysis: