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strains.
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As part of the New Deal, the Federal Government paid several thousand writers across the nation to write about what they observed. The collection of stories that is included in this volume all center upon Harlem and its so-called Renaissance. These essays are written by some writers that are well known, and by several who cannot be traced to this day. They all share a level of excellence that can result when talented people write about a place they are a part of. This collection is not a romanticized view of Harlem, The Apollo Theater, or any other landmarks you may know. The stories are stripped of all pretense, they each are small documentaries of what life was like for those who lived, worked, exploited, and were exploited by Harlem's unique population. It would be easy to dwell on portions of this book that would raise the anger that remains associated with various groups. This may be part of the reason this book was not embraced. Free Speech is a difficult taskmaster, and this may explain why these stories found their home in the archives of The Library Of Congress until they were finally brought to the light of day.
You will read of what, "Rent Parties", rapidly became once they were fashionable. The life of, "Thursday Girls", will leave you as numb as the stories of John Steinbeck. And for those who may think that the exploitation by today's televangelists is nauseating, come to know, "Father Divine", who entered Harlem in a one off custom built Dusenberg.
"Amateur Night at The Apollo", will bring insight into this famed theater that is as important as the polished versions so often written of this landmark. Fatso the Slickster, Big Bess, and Kingfish will entertain and sadden. And the story, "Finger Waves and Nu Life Pomades", will roll as smoothly across the minds eye as it does the ear.
My favorite part of the book was the manner these writers recorded the spoken word. They wrote what they heard, and while at times a reader may pause to get in step with some of these street poets, the language is priceless. This speech was a centerpiece of the stories of street vendors and the songs that made their days pass and their goods sell. Men and women who had their street music they would adapt as the blocks they passed changed, and the colors and religions of those who lived there changed as well.
This is a wonderfully collection of a piece of American History. No brief comment can do the work of these writers justice, and certainly is not enough to thank those who found, collected and edited the lives into this book.
It is a treasure, a gift, and a literary time capsule.
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The story of the black college student turned boarder turned Brotherhood front man was shocking, hardhitting and everything I'd heard about. The hero of the story is an unnamed student turned out from his college after an afternoon of chauffering a University Trustee goes terribly bad. He's sent from the deep South to New York City, where he attempts to find work and eventually becomes a race relations group spokesman. The theme of invisibility weaves in between each line and internal debate of the lead character. It's highly moving.
I can't add more than has already been said in previous Amazon reviews. I think this is an excellent example of the type of literature every American should read, in school or not. It represents where we were fifty years ago and shows us how far we still need to go. On top of that, it's an entertaining read!
Grab a copy, quickly, and enjoy! And also try *Their Eyes Were Watching God* by Nora Zeale Hurston as well as *I Been in Sorrows Kitchen and Licked Out All the Pots* by Susan Straight.
Thirty years later I pulled this book from the shelf and reread it on a whim. A number of things struck me on this reading that never occurred to me from my earlier limited youthful perspective.
First of all, Invisible Man is timeless and I find it hard to believe that it was written nearly fifty years ago. This book is about far more than racism, it is about loss of innocence and rape of the soul. It is about exploitation, manipulation, and the gross hypocrisy that exists in our society.
It is a work of great literary merit. Ellison displays verbal virtuosity of great breadth with beautiful and lyric eloquence. It is at times so dark and overbearingly heavy that a sensitive or less serious reader might cry out for relief. It is so relentless in plunging from one nightmarish episode to the next that one can reasonably say that it is often over the top, and yet any fair-minded reader can easily forgive the excesses of Ellison's vision for the importance of the message that it brings home.
Any reader, be he or she black, white, yellow or brown, who must make a way in this world--any reader who attempts to rise from the consciousness of the unprivelidged child or who is a seeker in life, should read Invisible Man as a cautionary tale as well as a great work of art. Please read this book if you have the courage and honesty to see the world through the eyes of the victim. This book has helped me to see those who had often in the past been invisible to me and I thank Ralph Ellison for making it possible.
In my opinion one of the most awe-inspiring facets of the novel is the usage of the words "white" and "black". Although on one read -through, a reader may simply ignore the placement or the function of that word, in actuality each use of the word has a specific function and meaning deliberately done so by Ellison.
The layers to this book are amazing. There are many interpretations to what happens in the book, all valid through Ellison's adeptness at using allusion. I have read this for two separate college classes and each time I read it I am amazed not only at the content of the book but also the ease of completing it. Ellison was influenced by T.S. Eliot and jazz, both of which not only come into play within the themes of the book but also make Ellison's writing style free-flowing, expressive yet comforting to read.
Besides the fact that this is a landmark in American literature, it is also an enjoyable read.
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