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Literature - Authors & Writers, Authors - Biography, Literary Biography, Peoples & Cultures Biography, African American Writers - Biography
Native Son: The Story of Richard Wright by Joyce Hart β€” book cover

Native Son: The Story of Richard Wright

by Joyce Hart
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Synopsis

Traces the life and achievements of the twentieth-century African American novelist, whose early life was shaped by a strict grandmother who had been a slave, an illiterate ...

Children's Literature

I have read a number of books on the life of Richard Wright but this one goes into more detail than others about his impoverished childhood. Poverty was not Richard Wright's only stumbling block. He lived with racial discrimination, threats on his life and the injustices that permeated society during the period of his lifetime. In one incident, he was befriended by an employee where he worked who allowed Richard to take out library books in his name since black people were not allowed to have library cards. There were a few such kindnesses during his early life. Through reading books, such as H. L. Menken's Prejudices, he learned the power of the written word. The more he read the more determined he was to become a writer. Once he moved north to Chicago, he became involved with the Communist party. Within the organization there was a club for artist and writers called the John Reed Club. Richard was happy to find an outlet for his artist endeavors. His peers often criticized him because his writings contained so much anger, fear, hunger and frustration. But Richard Wright felt it had to be told so that people would understand how racism and discrimination affect black people. 2002, Morgan Reynolds Publishing, Toledo

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Editorials

Children's Literature

I have read a number of books on the life of Richard Wright but this one goes into more detail than others about his impoverished childhood. Poverty was not Richard Wright's only stumbling block. He lived with racial discrimination, threats on his life and the injustices that permeated society during the period of his lifetime. In one incident, he was befriended by an employee where he worked who allowed Richard to take out library books in his name since black people were not allowed to have library cards. There were a few such kindnesses during his early life. Through reading books, such as H. L. Menken's Prejudices, he learned the power of the written word. The more he read the more determined he was to become a writer. Once he moved north to Chicago, he became involved with the Communist party. Within the organization there was a club for artist and writers called the John Reed Club. Richard was happy to find an outlet for his artist endeavors. His peers often criticized him because his writings contained so much anger, fear, hunger and frustration. But Richard Wright felt it had to be told so that people would understand how racism and discrimination affect black people. 2002, Morgan Reynolds Publishing, Toledo

School Library Journal

Gr 8 Up-A full portrait of one of the seminal African-American writers of the 20th century. Hart follows her subject from his poor Southern childhood to his struggles as a young man in Chicago to his literary success and notoriety and the end of his life in Europe. Wright's best-known works-at least to high school students-are Native Son and Black Boy, both of which are major reference points and sources for the text. The author also explores Wright's involvement in the Communist Party, which at one point facilitated his writing but would turn out to haunt his achievements; his love life; and his influence on such artists as James Baldwin and on cultural institutions like Broadway theater and the Paris Review. Occasional black-and-white photographs highlight people and places of import to his story, as does a standard time line. The writing is accessible and flows smoothly. While Robin Westen's biography (Enslow, 2002) is hard to beat, this one is a worthwhile addition.-Andrew Medlar, Chicago Public Library, IL Copyright 2003 Reed Business Information.

Book Details

Published
November 1, 2002
Publisher
Morgan Reynolds, Incorporated
Pages
128
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9781931798068

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