Sunday, November 26, 2023

The Revolutionary and Pioneering Impact of the Classic 1967 Novel THE MAN WHO CRIED I AM by the groundbreaking African American writer John A. Williams (1925-2015)

Black Writers in Paris, the FBI, and a Lost 1960s Classic: Rediscovering The Man Who Cried I Am

November 9, 2023 

The expatriate literary scene in Paris that flourished around Richard Wright and James Baldwin produced brilliant writing, intellectual ferment, and bitter rivalries—all of it, and much else from that turbulent time, thrillingly explored in John A. Williams’s explosive 1967 novel, The Man Who Cried I Am, a lost classic newly published in paperback by LOA. Merve Emre (The Personality Brokers), Adam Bradley (The Anthology of Rap; One Day It’ll All Make Sense), and William Maxwell (F.B. Eyes: How J. Edgar Hoover’s Ghostreaders Framed African American Literature) join LOA LIVE to explore this panoramic novel of Black American life in the era of segregation, civil rights, and paranoiac Cold War politics—Bradley enlists it in “the new Black canon”—and what it can tell us about the anxious world Williams moved in and our own politically unsettled moment. 
 
Library of America president and publisher Max Rudin moderates. 
 
Donate to support LOA LIVE programs: loa.org/loalive.
 

ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

 

John A. Williams, who wrote the novel “The Man Who Cried I Am,” published in a variety of genres.

John Alfred Williams (1925–2015) was an African American author, journalist, and professor of English at Rutgers University. He won the American Book Awards Lifetime Achievement award in 2011. Born in Jackson, Mississippi, in 1925 and raised from childhood in Syracuse, New York he earned a degree in English and Journalism from Syracuse University in 1950 (after service in the navy). After the publication of his first novel The Angry Ones in 1960 John A. Williams went on to have a distinguished literary career, including the publication of 12 novels, and the classic 1967 bestseller, The Man Who Cried I Am.
Williams professional career included teaching at the College of the Virgin Islands, the City College of New York, Sarah Lawrence College and he was a longtime professor of English at Rutgers University.

Williams received the Syracuse University Centennial Medal for Outstanding Achievement. He is also a member of the Nation Institute of Arts and Letters. Williams also won the 1998 American Book Award for Safari West. Williams was the author of 21 fiction and non-fiction books. 

Selected bibliography

Novels

Non-fiction

  • Africa: Her History, Lands and People: Told with Pictures. Rowman & Littlefield. 1962. ISBN 978-0-8154-0258-9.
  • This Is My Country Too (New American Library, 1965)[16]
  • The King God Didn't Save: Reflections on the Life and Death of Martin Luther King, Jr. (1970)
  • The Most Native of Sons: A Biography of Richard Wright (1970)
  • Flashbacks: A Twenty-Year Diary of Article Writing (1973)
  • If I Stop I'll Die: The Comedy and Tragedy of Richard Pryor (Thunder's Mouth Press, 1991)

Poetry

  • Safari West: Poems (Hochelaga Press, 1998)

Letters


Conversations with John A. Williams
by Jeffrey Allen Tucker (Editor)
University Press of Mississippi, 2018