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Book cover of Richard Wright, daemonic genius
U.S. Authors - 20th Century - Literary Biography, U.S. Authors - African American - Literary Biography, African American Literature - Literary Criticism, 20th Century American Literature - Pre WWII - Literary Criticism, African American Literary Biography

Richard Wright, daemonic genius

by Margaret Walker
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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

An angry and deeply ambivalent man emerges from this passionately committed profile of novelist-essayist Richard Wright (1908-1960). In Walker's estimation, the author of Native Son and Black Boy hated black women and treated the two white women he married sadistically. Self-hatred pushed Wright to conceive of himself as ``a white American with a black skin,'' even as he plunged into Pan-Africanism, Marxism and Freud for an anchor to his fractured self. Walker ( Jubilee ) and Wright were friends in the 1930s when they both worked on the WPA Writers' Project in Chicago. Combining biography, criticism and memoir, this excellent, flesh-and-blood portrait gets closer to the inner man than any previous volume. The author's claim for Wright as a Southern Gothic writer as well as an Afro-American one is buttressed by her intense account of his formative years in rural Mississippi. She also limns his bohemian life in New York and Paris, where he wrote eight books, unjustly neglected today. Photos. (Nov.)

Book Details

Published
November 1, 1988
Publisher
New York, NY : Warner Books, c1988.
Pages
428
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780446710015

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