Early Works
Lawd Today! / Uncle Tom's Children / Native Son
1st printing
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Word Count
234,000 words, Guess
Page Count
936 pages
Physical Format
Hardcover
Identifiers
- Internet Archiveworks00wrig
- ISBN-100940450666
- ISBN-139780940450660
- Goodreads15620
- GoogleajwfxgEACAAJ', '9toOAQAAMAAJ', '9oAnxQEACAAJ', 'ZmAfxQEACAAJ', 'aq0BxQEACAAJ', '5RSPzQEACAAJ
and 10 more
- Library of Congress Control Number91060540
- OCLC Control Number503671805
- OCLC Control Number318463475
- OCLC Control Number663042291
- OCLC Control Number905722683
- OCLC Control Number892164541
- OCLC Control Number848671974
- OCLC Control Number1088022677
- OCLC Control Number1120809729
- Open LibraryOL8420630M
Classifications
- DDC813.52
- LCCP3545. R815 1991
Description
Contains: Lawd Today! [Native Son](https://openlibrary.org/works/OL275128W) Uncle Tom's Children
First Sentence
NO MATTER how hard he squinted his eyes and craned his neck, he could not see the top of the steps.
Description
Native Son and Black Boy are classics of twentieth-century American literature—and yet the novel and memoir known to millions of readers are in fact revised and abbreviated versions of the books Richard Wright wrote. This two-volume Library of America edition presents for the first time Wright’s major works in the form in which he intended them to be read. The authoritative new texts, based on Wright’s original typescripts and proofs, reveal the full range and power of his achievement as an experimental stylist and as a fiery prophet of the tragic consequences of racism in American society. Native Son exploded onto the American literary and cultural scene in 1940. The story of Bigger Thomas, a young black man living in the raw, noisy, crowded slums of Chicago’s South Side, captured the hopes and yearnings, the pain and rage of black Americans with an unprecedented intensity and vividness. The text printed in this volume restores the changes and cuts—including the replacement of an entire scene—that Wright was forced to make by book club editors who feared offending their readers. The unexpurgated version of Wright’s electrifying novel shows his determination to write honestly about his own controversial protagonist. As he wrote in the essay “How ‘Bigger’ Was Born,” which accompanies the novel: “I became convinced that if I did not write of Bigger as I saw and felt him, I’d be acting out of fear.” This volume also contains Wright’s first novel, Lawd Today!, published posthumously in 1963, and his collection of stories, Uncle Tom’s Children, which appeared in 1938. Lawd Today! interweaves news bulletins, songs, exuberant wordplay, and scenes of confrontation and celebration into a kaleidoscopic chronicle of the events of one day—Lincoln’s birthday, February 12—in the life of a black Chicago postal clerk. The text for this edition reinstates Wright’s stylistic experiments, and the novel emerges as a far livelier work of the imagination. Uncle Tom’s Children first brought Wright to national attention when it received the Story prize for the best work submitted to the Federal Writers’ Project. The characters in these tales struggle to survive the cruelty of racism in the South, as Wright asks “what quality of will must a Negro possess to live and die with dignity in a country that denied his humanity.” All five stories Wright included in the 1940 second edition are published in this volume, along with his sardonic autobiographical essay “The Ethics of Living Jim Crow.” This volume includes notes on significant changes in Wright’s texts and a detailed chronology of his life. --front flap
Subjects
Topics
Places
People
Times
Series Statement
- Library of America, 55
Other Editions
- Early Works: Lawd Today! / Uncle Tom's Children / Native Son
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