On becoming an American writer Essays & nonfiction

James Alan McPherson, 1943-2016

Book - 2023

"Discover the unique mind and humane vision of an under-recognized American author. Encompassing themes of race, education, fame, law, and America's past and future, these essays are James Alan McPherson at his most prescient and invaluable. Born in segregated 1940s Georgia, McPherson graduated from Harvard Law School only to give up law and become a writer. In 1978, he became the first Black author to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. But all the while, McPherson was also writing and publishing nonfiction that stand beside contemporaries such as James Baldwin and Joan Didion, as this collection amply proves. These essays range from McPherson's profile of comedian Richard Pryor on the cusp of his stardom; a moving tribute t...o his mentor, Ralph Ellison; a near fatal battle with viral meningitis; and the story of how McPherson became a reluctant landlord to an elderly Black woman and her family. There are meditations on family as the author travels to Disneyland with his daughter, on the nuances of a neighborhood debate about naming a street after Malcolm X or Dr. Martin Luther King, and, throughout, those connections that make us most deeply human-including connections between writer and reader. McPherson writes of his early education, 'The structure of white supremacy had been so successful that even some of our parents and teachers had been conscripted into policing the natural curiosity of young people. We were actively discouraged from reading. We were encouraged to accept our lot. We were not told that books just might contain extremely important keys which would enable us to break out of the mental jails that have been constructed to contain us.' The collection's curator, Anthony Walton, writes, 'In his nonfiction, McPherson was often looking for a way 'beyond' the morasses in which Americans find themselves mired. His work is a model of humanistic imagining, an attempt to perform a healing that would, if successful, be the greatest magic trick in American history: to 'get past' race, to help create a singular American identity that was no longer marred by the existential tragedies of the nation's first 400 years. He attempted this profound reimagining of America while simultaneously remaining completely immersed in African American history and culture. His achievement demonstrates that an abiding love for black folks and black life can rest alongside a mastery of 'The King's English' and a sincere desire to be received as an American citizen and participant in democracy. It is time for that imaginative work to be fully comprehended and for this simultaneously American and African American genius to assume a fully recognized place beside the other constitutive voices in our national literature.' This is a collection is for any reader seeking a better understanding of our world and a connection to a wise and wickedly funny writer who speaks with forceful relevance and clarity across the decades"--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Boston, Massachusetts : Godine 2023.
Language
English
Main Author
James Alan McPherson, 1943-2016 (author)
Other Authors
Anthony Walton, 1960- (writer of introduction)
Physical Description
xxviii, 229 pages ; 19 cm
ISBN
9781567927481
  • Introduction
  • Junior and John Doe
  • Ivy Day in the Empty Room
  • To Blacks and Jews: Hab Rachmones
  • The New Comic Style of Richard Pryor
  • Crabcakes
  • Disneyland
  • Gravitas
  • Ukiyo
  • Reading
  • On Becoming an American Writer
  • Acknowledgments
Review by Kirkus Book Review

A posthumous gathering of essays by the first Black writer to win the Pulitzer Prize for fiction. Born in Savannah, McPherson (1943-2016) faced segregation and the proverbial tyranny of low expectations only to defy them with a Harvard Law degree, tenure at several universities, and a MacArthur fellowship. The 1960s, though turbulent, presented promising possibilities: "Opportunities seemed to materialize out of thin air; and if you were lucky, if you were in the right place at the right time, certain contractual benefits just naturally accrued." One way to be in the right place was to work hard, all the more so if you were one of the "black peasants." As McPherson writes, while the feeling was "that we could be whatever we wanted," getting there required overcoming not just "institutional forces," but also one's own self-imposed limitations. White supremacy is a very real thing, he writes, but so, too, is the phenomenon whereby some members of minority populations act as "watchdogs over those who challenge, in whatever way, the status quo." The suggestion, reading between the lines, is that the more-PC-than-thou are impediments just as real as the supremacists, a suggestion that will not go over well in some academic quarters. In a nimble essay that begins, as so often, with the personal--in this case friendship with Bernard Malamud--and expands outward to the universal, McPherson writes of the difficult interactions between Blacks and Jews, who should be natural allies as "spiritual elites" but instead profess antisemitism on the one hand and racism on the other in order to take their places in the American mainstream. While no conservative, McPherson offers sometimes-contrarian views on such matters as affirmative action and advocates otherwise questioning the assumptions of the "prevailing morality." Powerfully written and provocative, with subtle but pointed polemics often in play. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.