My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926–1938

Author:   Carmaletta M. Williams ,  John Edgar Tidwell ,  Nikky Finney ,  Nikky Finney
Publisher:   University of Georgia Press
ISBN:  

9780820345659


Pages:   240
Publication Date:   01 October 2013
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
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My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926–1938


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Author:   Carmaletta M. Williams ,  John Edgar Tidwell ,  Nikky Finney ,  Nikky Finney
Publisher:   University of Georgia Press
Imprint:   University of Georgia Press
Dimensions:   Width: 15.20cm , Height: 2.30cm , Length: 22.90cm
Weight:   0.513kg
ISBN:  

9780820345659


ISBN 10:   0820345652
Pages:   240
Publication Date:   01 October 2013
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   In Print   Availability explained
This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us.
Language:   English

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Reviews

Draining, painful letters that are impossible to stop reading bring a new and indelible appreciation of Langston Hughes's personal challenges as a young adult. Brilliant and carefully documented insights by the editors compel new readings of Hughes's works that we mistakenly thought we already understood. The freshest book on Hughes I have seen in a while. --Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper author of Not So Simple: The Simple Stories by Langston Hughes In this stunning collection of private correspondence to Langston Hughes from his mother, Carrie, Professors Carmaletta M. Williams and John Edgar Tidwell have bestowed a lavish gift on the global audience of a truly global artist. With meticulous scholarship and an unerring sense of biographical proportion, My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926-1938 opens the doors to otherwise unseen dimensions of Langston Hughes's most long-lived and most intimate interpersonal bond, freeing us at one turn after another from the accumulated cliches and oversimplifications that have masked the inner and outer lives of one of our most complex and accomplished writers. --John S. Wright author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison


In this stunning collection of private correspondence to Langston Hughes from his mother, Carrie, Professors Carmaletta M. Williams and John Edgar Tidwell have bestowed a lavish gift on the global audience of a truly global artist. With meticulous scholarship and an unerring sense of biographical proportion, My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926-1938 opens the doors to otherwise unseen dimensions of Langston Hughes's most long-lived and most intimate interpersonal bond, freeing us at one turn after another from the accumulated clichEs and oversimplifications that have masked the inner and outer lives of one of our most complex and accomplished writers.--John S. Wright author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison


Draining, painful letters that are impossible to stop reading bring a new and indelible appreciation of Langston Hughes's personal challenges as a young adult. Brilliant and carefully documented insights by the editors compel new readings of Hughes's works that we mistakenly thought we already understood. The freshest book on Hughes I have seen in a while. --Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper, author of Not So Simple: The Simple Stories by Langston Hughes The book successfully attempts, for the first time, to reveal the ways in which Hughes responded to his mother's letters through his own art rather than through his written replies. . . . While reminiscent of other complicated familial relationships in literature, this title is essential for scholars who are interested in Hughes's work and the Harlem Renaissance. --Pam Kingsbury, Library Journal In this stunning collection of private correspondence to Langston Hughes from his mother, Carrie, Professors Carmaletta M. Williams and John Edgar Tidwell have bestowed a lavish gift on the global audience of a truly global artist. With meticulous scholarship and an unerring sense of biographical proportion, My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926-1938 opens the doors to otherwise unseen dimensions of Langston Hughes's most long-lived and most intimate interpersonal bond, freeing us at one turn after another from the accumulated clichEs and oversimplifications that have masked the inner and outer lives of one of our most complex and accomplished writers. --John S. Wright, author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison My Dear Boy . . . is valuable testimony to Carrie's never-ending attempts to manipulate her son. --Hilton Als, The New Yorker My Dear Boy . . . offer[s] the fascinating argument that much of Hughes's poetry of the 1920s and 1930s was written in response to [his mother]. --Lawrence Jackson, Harper's In this stunning collection of private correspondence to Langston Hughes from his mother, Carrie, Professors Carmaletta M. Williams and John Edgar Tidwell have bestowed a lavish gift on the global audience of a truly global artist. With meticulous scholarship and an unerring sense of biographical proportion, My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926-1938 opens the doors to otherwise unseen dimensions of Langston Hughes's most long-lived and most intimate interpersonal bond, freeing us at one turn after another from the accumulated clichEs and oversimplifications that have masked the inner and outer lives of one of our most complex and accomplished writers.--John S. Wright author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison Draining, painful letters that are impossible to stop reading bring a new and indelible appreciation of Langston Hughes's personal challenges as a young adult. Brilliant and carefully documented insights by the editors compel new readings of Hughes's works that we mistakenly thought we already understood. The freshest book on Hughes I have seen in a while.--Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper author of Not So Simple: The Simple Stories by Langston Hughes In this stunning collection of private correspondence to Langston Hughes from his mother, Carrie, Professors Carmaletta M. Williams and John Edgar Tidwell have bestowed a lavish gift on the global audience of a truly global artist. With meticulous scholarship and an unerring sense of biographical proportion, My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926-1938 opens the doors to otherwise unseen dimensions of Langston Hughes's most long-lived and most intimate interpersonal bond, freeing us at one turn after another from the accumulated clichEs and oversimplifications that have masked the inner and outer lives of one of our most complex and accomplished writers.--John S. Wright author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison Draining, painful letters that are impossible to stop reading bring a new and indelible appreciation of Langston Hughes's personal challenges as a young adult. Brilliant and carefully documented insights by the editors compel new readings of Hughes's works that we mistakenly thought we already understood. The freshest book on Hughes I have seen in a while.--Donna Akiba Sullivan Harper author of Not So Simple: The Simple Stories by Langston Hughes


In this stunning collection of private correspondence to Langston Hughes from his mother, Carrie, Professors Carmaletta M. Williams and John Edgar Tidwell have bestowed a lavish gift on the global audience of a truly global artist. With meticulous scholarship and an unerring sense of biographical proportion, My Dear Boy: Carrie Hughes's Letters to Langston Hughes, 1926-1938 opens the doors to otherwise unseen dimensions of Langston Hughes's most long-lived and most intimate interpersonal bond, freeing us at one turn after another from the accumulated cliches and oversimplifications that have masked the inner and outer lives of one of our most complex and accomplished writers. --John S. Wright, author of Shadowing Ralph Ellison


Author Information

Carmaletta M. Williams (Editor) CARMALETTA M. WILLIAMS, professor of English and African American studies at Johnson County Community College, is the author of Langston Hughes in the Classroom: “Do Nothin’ till You Hear from Me” and Of Two Spirits: American Indian and African American Oral Histories. John Edgar Tidwell (Editor) JOHN EDGAR TIDWELL is a professor of English at the University of Kansas. His previous books include Montage of a Dream: The Art and Life of Langston Hughes, After Winter: The Art and Life of Sterling A. Brown, and Writings of Frank Marshall Davis: A Voice of the Black Press.

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