Upon first opening Black Lightning, the reader is surprised to find a fifteen-page introduction to a 136-page novel. Suspicions arise that here is a story that does not speak for itself! Careful examination reveals the introduction to be a scholarly, thorough (if a bit repetitious) review of the novel by Jean D\u27Costa of Hamilton College in New York. First published in 1955 (the same year Mais died at the age of fifty), Black Lightning was published again in 1983 as part of the Caribbean Writers Series with the introduction by D\u27Costa included. After reading the novel, one suspects that the introduction has been added in an attempt to elevate or justify a poorly-constructed work
This book is a long-neglected product of the 1920s negritude movement, in which a new kind of primi ...
Review of: A Black Odyssey: John Lewis Waller and the Promise of American Life, 1878-1900. Woods, Ra...
Over the past decade or so, masculinity has become a subject of continuing critical and theoretical ...
According to Bell, his book is a comprehensive sociopsychological, sociocultural interpretive histo...
Perhaps the most insightful statement MacDonald makes has not so much to do with blacks and televisi...
The Black Press, U.S.A. is an interesting book written about black publications in the United States...
Excerpt: The setting for Irini Spanidou’s third novel, Before, seems promising enough: New York Cit...
Contiene: Busfield, Andrea. Born. Under a Million Shadows. London: Black Swan, 2009 / reviewed by Bi...
Eckstein (2006) notes that the Atlantic slave trade has continuously haunted the cultural memories o...
This is a delightful book. Using the words of over two dozen individual residents of Pearl City, Flo...
Few middle and upper class Americans, whether they are black or white, can fathom the extent of humi...
Book Reviews of: Richard Hughes, The Fox in the Attic (Chatto and Windus, 1961) Richard Hughes, Th...
Trudier Harris begins her impressive new study of lynching and burning rituals in black literature w...
John R. Cooley\u27s Savages and Naturals is a critical analysis of the ways in which modern Americ...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
This book is a long-neglected product of the 1920s negritude movement, in which a new kind of primi ...
Review of: A Black Odyssey: John Lewis Waller and the Promise of American Life, 1878-1900. Woods, Ra...
Over the past decade or so, masculinity has become a subject of continuing critical and theoretical ...
According to Bell, his book is a comprehensive sociopsychological, sociocultural interpretive histo...
Perhaps the most insightful statement MacDonald makes has not so much to do with blacks and televisi...
The Black Press, U.S.A. is an interesting book written about black publications in the United States...
Excerpt: The setting for Irini Spanidou’s third novel, Before, seems promising enough: New York Cit...
Contiene: Busfield, Andrea. Born. Under a Million Shadows. London: Black Swan, 2009 / reviewed by Bi...
Eckstein (2006) notes that the Atlantic slave trade has continuously haunted the cultural memories o...
This is a delightful book. Using the words of over two dozen individual residents of Pearl City, Flo...
Few middle and upper class Americans, whether they are black or white, can fathom the extent of humi...
Book Reviews of: Richard Hughes, The Fox in the Attic (Chatto and Windus, 1961) Richard Hughes, Th...
Trudier Harris begins her impressive new study of lynching and burning rituals in black literature w...
John R. Cooley\u27s Savages and Naturals is a critical analysis of the ways in which modern Americ...
The seven carefully documented essays in literary criticism in this excellent short volume are possi...
This book is a long-neglected product of the 1920s negritude movement, in which a new kind of primi ...
Review of: A Black Odyssey: John Lewis Waller and the Promise of American Life, 1878-1900. Woods, Ra...
Over the past decade or so, masculinity has become a subject of continuing critical and theoretical ...