<p>The more we know about Ellison's life, the better. Jackson's research into his life, his studies, and his experiences as a young man helps to illuminate not only the great writing that Ellison would produce later, but also the body of American literature created by his contemporaries. It's a tremendously valuable book.</p>
Harvard University
<p>[A] rich, meticulous biography . . . Jackson beautifully contextualizes Ellison, whether in Oklahoma, Alabama, or New York . . . While evoking each of Ellison's environments brilliantly, Jackson also discusses the influence of <i>The Waste Land</i> on Ellison's young mind. This kind of cultural and psychological insight makes for a very satisfying counterpart.</p>
<p>[A] discerning, thorough, and much needed biography.</p>
<p>In the late 1960s, the writer James Allan McPherson wrote a fine <i>Atlantic Monthly</i> article on Ralph Ellison. An article about the man—the fact that he had a listed phone number—the view of Harlem from his apartment. What Lawrence Jackson's <i>Ralph Ellison: Emergence of Genius</i> has done in such an exhaustive work is expanded thousands of times the intimate portrait of the Ellison I found in the article. It is an amazing and sensitive and superb book, very much worthy of one of the twentieth century's greats. Jackson has also given us a thorough and sharp analysis and assessment of Ellison's work. Those of us who will be forever moved and educated by Ellison will always be appreciative of what Jackson has done. His book will stand, for a long time, as the definitive portrait and analysis of a man from whom so many writers are descended.</p>
author of <i>The Known World</i>
<p>Jackson's painstaking documentation of Ralph Ellison's early life and the beginning of his literary career provides a much needed resource for Ellison's readers and critics.</p>
author of <i>Jazz Country: Ralph Ellison in America</i>
<p>This book is a powerful and pioneering treatment of the life and work of an American literary giant. Jackson deserves our praise.</p>
author of <i>Race Matters</i> and <i>Democracy Matters</i>
<p>Jackson's remarkable biography of Ralph Ellison is an essential contribution to the scholarship on one of the twentieth century's greatest writers. Painstakingly researched and exhaustive, this compelling portrait of Ellison clarifies his genius—and his intellectual era—for a new century.</p>
author of <i>Middle Passage</i>
<p>Jackson's absorbing biography of Ralph Ellison makes a vital contribution to American literary history.</p>
author of <i>Color and Culture: Black Writers and the Making of the Modern Intellectual</i>
Produktdetaljer
Biographical note
LAWRENCE P. JACKSON is an associate professor of African American studies and English at Emory University. He was awarded a Ford Foundation Fellowship and was Resident Fellow at Harvard’s W. E. B. Du Bois Institute while completing this book.