"Recovers Coleman's life and literary legacy"
One of the most distinctive and prolific writers of the Harlem
Renaissance, Anita Scott Coleman (1890-1960) found popular and
critical success in the flourishing African American press of the
early twentieth century. Yet unlike many of her New York-based
contemporaries, Coleman lived her life in the American West, first
in New Mexico and later in California. Her work thus offers a rare
view of African American life in that region.
Broader in scope than any previous anthology of Coleman's
writings, this volume collects the author's finest stories, essays,
and poems, including many not published since they first appeared
in African American newspapers during the 1920s, '30s, and '40's.
Editors Cynthia Davis and Verner D. Mitchell introduce these
writings with an in-depth biographical essay that places Coleman in
the context of the Harlem Renaissance movement.
The volume also features vintage family photographs, a detailed
chronology, and a genealogical tree covering five generations of
the Coleman family. Based on extensive research and written with
the full cooperation of the Coleman family, "Western Echoes of the
Harlem Renaissance" gives readers new understanding of this
overlooked writer's life and literary accomplishments.
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