Conversations with Chester Himes

Conversations with Chester Himes

Conversations with Chester Himes

Conversations with Chester Himes

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Overview

The late African American novelist Chester Himes (1909-1984) is well known both in America and Europe for his moving depictions of black men destroyed by a pervasive racism and for darkly humorous stories of Harlem's underworld. His novels and stories are all the more striking because they are infused with his own varied experiences as a petty criminal, convict, writer, and expatriate. Himes was equally revealing in the many interviews he granted during his long and tumultuous career in America and France.

Himes displays a remarkable candor in all his interviews. Although he never involved himself in any of the black political movements of his lifetime, he did not flinch from speaking his mind about racial politics in America. He was straightforward, as well, in speaking about his relationships with other black writers. As a contemporary of Richard Wright, James Baldwin, and Ralph Ellison, he could be brutally direct in his opinions of them and their work. He leavens such criticism by being equally frank about himself and his shortcomings.

Compiled here for the first time and drawn from many sources, these interviews span Himes's career and present a bold picture of a proud, brilliant, and combative man who commands both attention and respect.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780878058198
Publisher: University Press of Mississippi
Publication date: 11/01/1995
Series: Literary Conversations Series
Pages: 168
Product dimensions: 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x (d)

About the Author

Michel Fabre is author of Richard Wright: Books and Writers and The World of Richard Wright, coauthor (with Edward Margolies) of The Several Lives of Chester Himes, and coeditor (with Robert E. Skinner) of Conversations with Chester Himes and (with Keneth Kinnamon) of Conversations with Richard Wright, all published by University Press of Mississippi.

Read an Excerpt

Michel Fabre: Has your living in France played an important role in your career?

Chester Himes: Only to some extent. I was known in the United States before I left in 1953, and If He Hollers had sold well. But I remained a "Negro writer;" in other words something marginal in the mind of the public; a not quite respectable writer for reasons that had nothing to do with morals. The only Negro writer at the time who enjoyed any status as an "American writer" was Richard Wright. He was recognized as such, but I wasn't, nor were many others.

Later, my detective stories sold well in the United States, but they weren't considered important enough to be reviewed.

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