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When the 'Native Son' Became 'The Man Who Lived Underground'
25 September 2021
On December 12, 1941, the literary agent Paul Reynolds contacted Edward Asner, one of the top editors at the publishing house Harper & Brothers, with what should have come as welcome news. "Here," Reynolds...
a book of prefaces
american communist party
arkansas
arnold rampersad
arthur koestler
between the world and me
black boy
book-of-the-month club
chicago
clarence thomas
confederacy
daily worker
edward asner
fred daniels
h.l. mencken
harlem renaissance
harper & brothers
hazelrowley
homage to catalonia
i tried to be a communist
jim crow
josef stalin
left front
library of america
louis fischer
memphis commercial appeal
mississippi
narrative of the life of frederick douglas
native son
new york times
paul reynolds
pulitzer prize
reinhold niebuhr
richard wright
roxie
saturday review of literature
silas hoskins
southern night
spanish civil war
stephen spender
te-nehisi coates
ten days that shook the world
the atlantic
the god that failed
the horror and the glory
the man who lived underground
the sahara of the bozart
trotskyite
uncle tom's children
zora neale hurston