Minor Characters
Karl Marx “Buddy” Copeland
One of Doctor Copeland’s sons. Embarrassed by his given name and estranged from his father, Karl Marx lives on his Grandpapa’s farm and goes by “Buddy”—yet when his father needs him, Buddy is there for him.
Hamilton Copeland
One of Doctor Copeland’s sons.
Ralph Kelly
The baby of the Kelly family. Mick is often in charge of watching over and caring for Ralph, and frequently drags him around town in a little wagon.
Hazel Kelly
Mick’s eldest sister. Hazel is naturally beautiful but dull and impassionate. She helps Mick secure a job at Woolworth’s department store toward the end of the novel.
Etta Kelly
One of Mick’s older sisters. A vain, self-absorbed, unkind young woman who dreams of being in Hollywood movies despite being plain-looking. Toward the end of the novel, she falls ill due to a problem with one of her ovaries.
Bill Kelly
Mick’s eldest brother. A shy, self-conscious teenage boy.
Mrs. Kelly
Mick’s mother. An often-frazzled woman who sometimes puts her boarders’ comfort before that of her own children.
Marshall Nicolls
A pharmacist who is one of Doctor Copeland’s good friends. Nicolls believes that the key to “amicable” relations between the black and white community in town hinges on black people laying low and keeping the peace.
John Roberts
A warm, gregarious postman who is one of Doctor Copeland’s good friends.
Buster Johnson
A young man who is incarcerated alongside Willie at the state penitentiary. Like Willie, Buster is tortured by a cruel group of guards—and, like Willie, is “crippled for life” when one of his feet is amputated as a result of that torture.
Lancy Davis
A passionate, idealistic young man who wins Doctor Copeland’s annual Christmastime essay contest for his revolutionary essay about building a nation entirely of black people within the American South. Lancy is later killed in a race riot at the Sunny Dixie.
Simms
A fanatical itinerant preacher who delivers sermons on street corners throughout town and chalks Bible verses on the walls of houses and businesses. Simms is constantly trying to convert Jake Blount, but Jake takes any opportunity he can to mess with and embarrass Simms.
Patterson
The manager of the Sunny Dixie Show.
Mrs. Minowitz
Harry Minowitz’s mother.
Spareribs
One of Bubber’s neighborhood friends. Spareribs is a wild and unruly child who inherits a gun from his recently-deceased father—a gun which Bubber accidentally fires at Baby Wilson.
Delores Brown
A girl at Mick’s school who gives Mick piano lessons in exchange for lunch money.
Carl
A young deaf and mute man whom John Singer once tried to befriend—only to have Antonapoulos scare Carl away with his unfounded rage.