Amiable with Big Teeth
By Claude McKay
Edited by Jean-Christophe Cloutier and Brent Hayes Edwards
By Claude McKay
Edited by Jean-Christophe Cloutier and Brent Hayes Edwards
By Claude McKay
Edited by Jean-Christophe Cloutier and Brent Hayes Edwards
By Claude McKay
Edited by Jean-Christophe Cloutier and Brent Hayes Edwards
Category: Historical Fiction | Classic Fiction
Category: Historical Fiction | Classic Fiction
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$18.00
Feb 06, 2018 | ISBN 9780143132219
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Feb 07, 2017 | ISBN 9781101628195
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Praise
“This is a major discovery. It dramatically expands the canon of novels written by Harlem Renaissance writers. More important, because it was written in the second half of the period, it shows that the renaissance continued to be vibrant and creative and turned its focus to international issues — in this case the tensions between Communists, on the one hand, and black nationalists, on the other, for the hearts and minds of black Americans.”
—Henry Louis Gates, Jr.
“Claude McKay is such a romantic, questing figure in American literature that he belongs as much to the Lost Generation as he does to the Harlem Renaissance. The dramatic work of his expatriate youth is celebrated, but much less attention has been paid to what he wrote after he returned to New York in the mid 1930s. Indeed, his autobiography, a monumental survey of Harlem, and his occasional pieces were all we knew of his late work. Now two brilliant scholars have discovered McKay’s last novel and thereby changed our picture of his closing years. Amiable with Big Teeth also tells us a lot about how black people around the globe responded to the invasion of Ethiopia and the spectre of fascism. McKay is always interesting and always heartbreaking, he is so original and desperate and brave.”
—Darryl Pinckney
“As a creative work and a historical document, Amiable With Big Teeth is nothing short of a master key into a world where the intersection of race and global revolutionary politics plays out in the lives of characters who are as dynamic and fully realized as the novel itself (…) For today’s audience, McKay’s last novel should make for fascinating and timely reading as Americans enter an era in which solidarity-building across racial identities and national borders feels more necessary, and perhaps more difficult to achieve, than ever.”
—The Atlantic
“McKay (1889–1948) has long been considered one of the great authors of the Harlem Renaissance. (…) Scholars and admirers now have a new piece of the oeuvre to admire (…)Amiable With Big Teeth lives up to McKay’s reputation.”
—TIME
“A satire of the political activists and intelligentsia of 1930s Harlem, it is a capstone to the literary career of McKay (1889-1948), considered one of the pillars of the Harlem Renaissance.”
—Newsday
“As a roman à clef written just a few years after the period it covers, Amiable with Big Teeth reflects that era with an intimacy impossible to capture in a later time—a miraculous feat for a book discovered seven decades later… it inevitably recasts the narrative of Claude McKay’s later years—altering our understanding of a novelist who seemingly wrote his last novel 15 years before his death—and it’s a satisfying rewrite.”
—Paste Magazine
“To read Amiable today is to discover a lost world that, with its internecine struggles over race and class in New York and elsewhere, may seem equally alien and visceral (…) the novel is an essential window into an overlooked era, when turmoil in Europe and the Depression at home didn’t stop Harlem’s brightest lights from carrying on with their work.”
—The Village Voice
“Engaging and well-paced.”
—Kirkus Reviews
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