Hazel Rowley. Richard Wright: The Life and Times.
Garrett, Daniel
New York. Henry Holt. 2001. 626 pages. $35. ISBN 0-8050-4776-X
"Is THIS THE DIRT ROAD, / Winding through windy trees, / That
I must travel?" asked writer Richard Wright (1908-1960) in a haiku,
number 131, written near the end of his life. Wright's haikus were
not published in a book, Haiku: This Other World, until more than three
decades after his death, and they are one more testament to what was not
known about this famous writer while he lived. Wright's lyrical and
polemical autobiography, Black Boy, and the grim ideological urban drama
Native Son may be well-known references in American literature courses,
but exclusive consideration of them have given us a narrow view of the
author who also wrote the comic, experimental fiction Lawd Today!, the
existential novel The Outsider, and Savage Holiday, a novel featuring no
African Americans, as well as books on Africa, Asia, and Europe--Black
Power, The Color Curtain, and Pagan Spain.
Richard Wright, born to a sharecropper father and schoolteacher
mother in Mississippi, endured a childhood of poverty, familial
misunderstanding, religious dogmatism, and racial prejudice. He
distinguished himself when young by writing a short story that was
published and being selected as a representative of his grade-school
class. Reading H. L. Mencken in the late 1920s introduced him to
literary and social criticism and to writers such as Dreiser, Lewis, and
Anderson. Wright moved to Chicago, where he worked in the post office.
He became a member of the John Reed Club and through it met other
writers, became a member of the Communist party, and then moved to New
York, where he wrote for a party publication. Wright's first book,
the short-story collection Uncle Tom's Children, was published in
1938 and received good reviews. Two years later, with Native Son, Wright
became an important American writer. Wright married Ellen Poplowitz in
1941, published Black Boy in 1945, and visited France the next year and
moved there with Ellen in 1947, where he would live, work, and die.
Hazel Rowley's biography of Wright may not be elegant or
eloquent (it is rather plain and slow-moving) but it is the most factual
and fair--and the most intelligent--biography of Wright that I am aware
of, and it allows future generations to inherit a Wright who is whole,
at once man, thinker, and writer. Richard Wright was handsome, likable,
and hardworking, with a voice that ranged from high to baritone, a man
with the cool confidence of a jazz musician--he liked to talk and laugh
and be with friends, including Jean-Paul Sartre and Simone de Beauvoir.
(One friend, Gertrude Stein, betrayed him by introducing him to a thief
and then by refusing to acknowledge the theft of Wright's property,
which included penicillin for Wright's daughter.) Wright was,
surprisingly, a sexual swordsman who put his marriage to Ellen at risk.
Rowley's book is also interesting for addressing the rumors
surrounding Wright's death (CIA? femme fatale?). Rowley
investigates Wright's medical treatment, which included the taking
of bismuth for intestinal disorders, a prescription given by a doctor
who made Wright's friends uneasy. Oral bismuth was then popular in
France, but would later be known to cause heavy-metal poisoning leading
to kidney and liver failure.
Richard Wright's legacy is a complex one--at once aesthetic,
intellectual, and political. Intelligent interpretation is what Wright
tried to provide in his own work, but not always what he received for
his own efforts. Wright's work was censored before publicationmfor
instance, the sexuality of Bigger Thomas was excised from Native Son,
and after publication his work was sometimes misunderstood or
misrepresented. A 1957 New York Times review of Wright's White Man,
Listen! called the book "argumentative, belligerent and often
wrong-headed." It then went on to summarize how correct Wright was
in many of his positions but reprimanded him for not understanding well
enough the threat of communism (Wright joined then abandoned the
Communist party). African American novelist David Bradley once said that
Wright seemed a "cold-blooded intellectual." Feminists more
recently have questioned his work's treatment of women and his
dismissal of Zora Hurston's Their Eyes Were Watching God. However,
Wright was for himself and for others a one-man university system.
Gwendolyn Brooks, Margaret Walker, and other women writers acknowledge
his active support of their early careers; and Ralph Ellison, James
Baldwin, and Gordon Parks admitted his influence, although Wright's
tying literature so closely to politics may have become a burden to
subsequent writers.
"All of my life had shaped me to live by my own feelings and
thoughts," Wright wrote in Black Boy. Hazel Rowley's necessary
biography of Wright is preceded by other books on the life and work of
Richard Wright, resources that can help to place the efforts of this
controversial writer in the most comprehensive of contexts. Wright
brought not merely heat but light; he was, in the words of one of his
own haikus (#647), a fire: "Burning out its time, / And timing its
own burning, / One lonely candle."
Daniel Garrett
Queens, New York