SEARCH
SEARCH
For accessibility needs related to event registrations or room reservations, please reach out to the Center for Accessibility at 202-727-2142 or DCPLaccess@dc.gov. For general questions about reservations or event details, please contact the DC Public Library location you are planning to visit. |
Rediscovering "The Man Who Cried I Am" with Merve Emre, Adam Bradley, and William Maxwell
Visit West End Library for a live stream screening of Library of America's Online Program: Black Writers in Paris, the FBI, and a Lost 1960s Classic
From Library of America's Online Programs:
The expatriate literary scene in Paris that flourished around Richard Wright and James Baldwin produced brilliant writing, intellectual ferment, and bitter rivalries—all of it, and much else from that turbulent time, thrillingly explored in John A. Williams’s explosive 1967 novel, The Man Who Cried I Am, a lost classic newly published in paperback by LOA.
Merve Emre (The Personality Brokers), Adam Bradley (The Anthology of Rap; One Day It’ll All Make Sense), and William Maxwell (F.B. Eyes: How J. Edgar Hoover’s Ghostreaders Framed African American Literature) join LOA LIVE to explore this panoramic novel of Black American life in the era of segregation, civil rights, and paranoiac Cold War politics—Bradley enlists it in “the new Black canon”—and what it can tell us about the anxious world Williams moved in and our own politically unsettled moment.
AGE GROUP: | Seniors | Adults |
EVENT TYPE: | Writing | Lecture | Educational Program | Author Talk |