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Couverture / Jaquette
Introduced by Tayari Jones
New York City, 1940s. In a crumbling tenement in Harlem, Lutie Johnson is determined to build a new life for herself and her eight-year-old boy, Bub - a life that she can be proud of. Having left her unreliable husband, Lutie believes that, with hard work and resolve, she can begin again; she has faith in the American dream. But in her struggle to earn money and raise her son amid the violence, poverty and racial dissonance of her surroundings, Lutie is soon trapped: she is a woman alone, 'too good-looking to be decent', with predators at every turn.
'A powerful, uncompromising work of social criticism . . . Few works of fiction have so clearly illuminated the devastating impact of racial injustice' CORETTA SCOTT KING
'The Street is my favorite type of novel, literary with an astonishing plot . . . Petry is the writer we have been waiting for, hers are the stories we need to fully illuminate the questions of our moment, while also offering a page-turning good time . . . insightful, prescient and unputdownable prose' TAYARI JONES, NEW YORK TIMES
Note biographique
Ann Petry (1908-1997), novelist and writer of short stories and books for young people, was one of America's most distinguished authors. Her first published story appeared in 1943 in the Crisis. She then began on her first novel, The Street, which was published in 1946 and for which she received the Houghton Mifflin Literary Fellowship. Petry wrote two more novels, The Country Place and The Narrows, and numerous short stories, articles and children's books.
Détails
Code EAN : | 9780349012933 |
Editeur : | Little, Brown Book Group-Little, Brown Book Group |
Date de publication : | 17-12-2019 |
Format : | Livre de poche |
Langue(s) : | anglais |
Hauteur : | 198 mm |
Largeur : | 124 mm |
Epaisseur : | 30 mm |
Poids : | 329 gr |
Stock : | à commander |
Nombre de pages : | 403 |
Collection : | Virago Modern Classics |
Mots clés : | Harlem; 1940s; working class; segregation; interracial romance; black lives matter; racism; motherhood; feminism; women's fiction; bestseller; black woman; African American literature; American classic; feminist novel; poverty; black American literature; rediscovered classic; ann petry; twentieth century fiction; prejudice; black American fiction; 1950s; jim crow era; interracial relationship; forbidden romance; New England; discrimination; women's literary fiction; virago; vmc; virago modern classics |