If He Hollers Let Him Go

Chester B. HIMES

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If He Hollers Let Him Go

"THE HEART OF HARD-BOILED WRITING": FIRST EDITION OF CHESTER HIMES' FIRST NOVEL, IF HE HOLLERS LET HIM GO

HIMES, Chester B. If He Hollers Let Him Go. New York: Doubleday, Doran, 1945. Octavo, original black cloth, original dust jacket.

First edition of Chester Himes' explosive first novel, a hard-boiled classic compared to Wright's Native Son for its bold depiction of "the shattering effects of racism," in original dust jacket.

Himes, famed for his series about two black NYPD detectives, read Dashiell Hammett and began writing while in prison for armed robbery. To biographer James Sallis, Himes is "America's central black writer. He stood squarely at the crossroad of tradition and innovation… creating a literature in its absolute individuality, in its strange power and quirkiness, in its cruelty and cockeyed compassion, ineffably American" (Chester Himes, xii). If He Hollers, Himes' first novel, boldly fuses "the protest and hard-boiled genres, focusing on characters in states of constant threat." Often compared to Wright's Native Son in depicting "the shattering effects of racism," Graham Hodges highlights a shared essence of the "existential despair so much at the heart of hard-boiled writing. Further, Hodges remarks, If He Hollers affords a capsule history of black workers during an important transitional period" (Sallis, 100-111). Himes' body of work serves as a defining bridge from the Harlem Renaissance to the hard-boiled novel, transcending genres in its "reflection of a life and aesthetic shaped by the absurdities of racism" (Nelson, ed. African American Autobiographers, 190). "First Edition" stated on copyright page. Reilly, 778-780. See Hubin II:I, 403.

Text fresh with occasional trace of marginal soiling, faint rubbing to cloth; light edge-wear, light soiling to price-clipped dust jacket. A near-fine copy.

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