Ann Petry (1908-1997) achieved prominence during a period in
which few black women were published with regularity in America.
Her novels "Country Place" (1947) and "The Narrows" (1988), along
with various short stories and nonfiction, poignantly described the
struggles and triumphs of middle-class blacks living in primarily
white communities.Petry's ancestors, the James family, served as
inspiration for much of her fiction. This collection of more than
four hundred family letters, edited by the daughter of Ann Petry,
is an engaging portrait of black family life from the 1890s to the
early twentieth century, a period not often documented by African
American voices.Ann Petry's maternal grandfather, Willis Samuel
James, was a slave taught by his children to read and write. He
believed "the best place for the negro is as near the white man as
he can get." He followed that "truth," working as coachman for a
Connecticut governor and buying a house in a white neighborhood in
Hartford. Willis had sixteen children by three wives. The letters
in this collection are from him and his second wife, Anna E.
Houston James, and five of Anna's children, of whom novelist Ann
Petry's mother, Bertha James Lane, was the oldest.History is made
and remade by the availability of new documents, sources, and
interpretations. "Can Anything Beat White?" contributes a great
deal to this process. The experiences of the James family as
documented in their letters challenge both representations of black
people at the turn of the century as well as our contemporary sense
of black Americans.
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