It was first published in 1946. Remember that date. It says on the cover of the 1976 edition that it has sold over a million copies.
It's a story of an attractive young Black woman living in Harlem at the end of WW II, struggling to find a path to a better life. It shifts here and there to the stories of other characters she deals with, but it's basically Lutie Johnso's story.
What I find of most interest is that
- this book got published in 1946
- that many copies were sold
- that the message seems to have little impact on White understanding
And this second passage is much later. While Lutie was out of Harlem most of the month working for White people in a large house, her husband took up with another woman. Lutie has quit her job and is back in Harlem in a depressing, small apartment with her son.
On the previous page she had, walking home, encountered a woman whose head was bleeding.
"Yes, she thought, she and Bub [her eight year old son] had to get out of ... 116th Street.
In the 1992 New York Times article we learn that Ann Petry grew up comfortably in a small town in Connecticut.
"Mrs. Petry's grandfather was a chemist and her father a pharmacist who owned his own drugstore in town. Her mother was a barber, then a chiropodist and finally started her own linen business. Mrs. Petry graduated from the College of Pharmacy of the University of Connecticut and worked for a time in the family shop. A Comfortable Childhood
Theirs was one of the few black families in this old Connecticut town then, and still is today, but the incidents of prejudice, said Mrs. Petry, have been few. Hers was a childhood of privilege, especially for a black child of those days. Two working parents, family all about, enough money for hair ribbons, new shoes, warm meals and college. Mrs. Petry came to known firsthand the traumas of the street only after she married in 1938 and moved to Harlem."
I'm still puzzled about the impact this book had. Over a million copies had been sold by the time the 1992 paperback version was published. Who were those people? How did they react? How many did anything to make the lives of Black folks easier? How many were White? Black?
This book wasn't talking about the suffering of Black people in the South. It was about people in New York City.
The original review of the book, says it was published in February 1946. A bit of context - Donald Trump was born June 14, 1946. I'm guessing neither of his parents read this book.
One other thought: As I read this book and imagined who might have read the book, I got this image of all the people who had ever read it gathered together for a week to talk about the book and what actions they could take to change things. To a degree, social media moves us in that direction. Not all the readers of a book, but a significant number can share the experience.
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