Description
The Harlem Renaissance writer's innovative and groundbreaking novel depicting African American life in the South and North, with a foreword by National Book Foundation 5 Under 35 honoree Zinzi Clemmons.
About the Author
Jean Toomer (1894-1967) was an African American novelist and poet. The son of a mixed-race freedman born into slavery who later joined ranks with the mulatto elite in Washington DC, Toomer's lighter skin and upbringing in all-white schools and neighbourhoods caused him to not to identify as black or white but rather an American who represented a new mixed race. Despite his refusal to be bound or classified by race, Toomer is considered one of the most important African American writers to come from the Harlem Renaissance.
Reviews
"[Toomer] is American literature's greatest, most enduring enigma. . . . But here, in this lush, bleak book, in his evocation of the world as it is instead of how it ought to be, something hardier, more useful is conveyed - of the possibilities for epiphany, the reliable consolations of love and revenge. And in his style - this pastiche of poem, autobiography and fable - there is an integration of the self that the life never afforded."
-Parul Sehgal, The New York Times
"Over the past 95 years this Harlem Renaissance 'experiment' - a mosaic of poems, vignettes and short stories, many of these last being shocking studies of loneliness and the longing for love - has risen from relative obscurity to become what it always was, a groundbreaking work of 20th-century American literature."
-Michael Dirda, The Washington Post
Book Information
ISBN 9780143133674
Author Jean Toomer
Format Paperback
Page Count 272
Imprint Penguin Classics
Publisher Penguin Books Ltd
Weight(grams) 190g
Dimensions(mm) 197mm * 130mm * 15mm