¶ … Man Who Was Almost a Man" by Richard Wright. The book takes a look at the foolishness of a young boy who in his desire for a gun discovers that respect is not gained through materialistic things but through moral ethics.
The Man Who Was Almost A Man"
Richard Nathan Wright was born to Nathan Wright and Ella Wilson on September 4, 1908 in Roxie, Mississippi. His father was an illiterate sharecropper, while his mother was an educated woman who worked as a schoolteacher. He was born into a family of slaves. [Richard Wright biography]
It was in the mid-1930s that Richard Wright had started writing out the drafted version of "The Man Who Was Almost a Man" basically drafting as a chapter in a novel about the childhood and adolescence of a black boxer under the caption of Tarbaby's Dawn. This story remained unfinished but Wright had the story published in Harper's Bazaar under the title "Almos' a Man," in 1940. [Richard Wright biography]
It was during this period that Wright was at the peak of his career as a writer and went on to publish three of his major works, Uncle Tom's Children, Native Son, and Black Boy during the period between 1938 and 1945. He was the first black-American author to author a bestseller under the title of Native Son. He gained momentum as the internationally acclaimed bestseller for his research on racial issues in a bold, and realistic style. [Richard Wright biography]
The final version of "The Man Who Was Almost a Man" was published in the same year the writer died in- 1960.
This book comprised of a series of short stories under the title of Eight Men. This book won the hearts of many who praised the collection for providing the readers with a touchy perception of racial oppression. [Richard Wright biography]
We know by now that the feelings of the Blacks towards the Whites were always shadowed by the past experiences of the first encounters between the Spaniards and the Indians of the Americas followed by the human trafficking of African-Americans in the Twentieth Century United...
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