Description
The time is now for this biography of Eric Walrond. It will unquestionably make an original and significant contribution to the fields of African American and Caribbean literary studies, transnational studies, and Diaspora studies. It is the only existing biography of Walrond, and does an admirable job of not only presenting solid research on its subject but also thinking through the complexity of Walrond's particular contribution and role in twentieth-century black transnational and Diaspora history and culture. -- Gary Edward Holcomb, Ohio University
About the Author
James Davis is associate professor of English and American studies at Brooklyn College. The recipient of a fellowship at the Leon Levy Center for Biography, he is also the author of Commerce in Color: Race, Consumer Culture, and American Literature, 1893-1933.
Reviews
A great read, even for readers who do not know about the Harlem Renaissance and Eric Walrond. The book tells a fascinating and moving story of a literary talent's demise, or what it takes to nurture and support the literary talents of minority and impoverished writers struggling with their issues of self-esteem and self-confidence while living in straitened circumstances. -- Michelle Ann Stephens, Rutgers University-New Brunswick Eric Walrond, handsome, cosmopolitan, and beguilingly enigmatic, may have been the most promising literary talent of the Harlem Renaissance. His collection, Tropic Death, was an astonishing succes d'estime. A Guggenheim Fellowship certified the promise of The Big Ditch, Walrond's bildungsroman of capitalism, underdevelopment, and race. In one of the more mysterious losses in American letters, the book never appeared and its author disappeared. James Davis's finely written, beautifully paced Eric Walrond is a major biography of a fascinating figure, a triumph of archival sleuthing that reintroduces readers to almost everybody known to his peripatetic protagonist. -- David Levering Lewis, New York University Davis has given us a rich portrait of the writer who may be the greatest conundrum of the Harlem Renaissance: Eric Walrond. He not only situates the 'sepulchral' brilliance of Walrond's best-known book, Tropic Death, but also recovers a much larger corpus of fugitive articles and stories. As peripatetic (with stops in Barbados, Panama, the United States, Haiti, France, and England) as it was ultimately tragic, Walrond's life may be the single most resonant record of the transnational contours of black culture in the period. -- Brent Hayes Edwards, author of The Practice of Diaspora An eloquent biography... Davis's careful and meticulous research re-establishes Walrond as one of the first black writers to depict Caribbean lives and voices in American fiction, putting him alongside his peers in the Harlem Renaissance. Publishers Weekly [Davis's] biography provides deft readings of the Harlem Renaissance and the transatlantic Caribbean, while bringing Walrond out of the shadows. -- Douglas Field Times Literary Supplement Well-researched and highly readable. Caribbean Quarterly Skillfully researched and engagingly composed, the books stands as a discerning recuperation of a paradigmatic but neglected figure. Small Axe Salon [An] excellent new biography of Walrond. -- James Smethurst Journal of American History A wonderfully readable book in eleven chapters -- Carole Boyce Davies Carribbean Studies Association Newsletter [A] highly readable narrative... excellent, painstakingly researched. New West Indian Guide This wonderfully readable book in 11 chapters, and a postscript covers the length and breadth of Walrond's biography and literary career... Eric Walrond: A Life in the Harlem Renaissance and the Transatlantic Caribbean repositions this writer among his peers in an admirable way. We can clearly reconfigure him as belonging to few literary homes-as a Barbadian writer, as a Caribbean writer, as a Caribbean-American personality, as a black British writer, as an African diasporic thinker, and definitely as a major contributor to the Harlem Renaissance. -- Carole Boyce Davies The ALH Online Review
Awards
Short-listed for Phyllis Wheatley Book Award 2016.
Book Information
ISBN 9780231157841
Author James Davis
Format Hardback
Page Count 440
Imprint Columbia University Press
Publisher Columbia University Press