Editorial Akal
Colección Básica de bolsillo Akal, Número 0
Lugar de edición
Tres Cantos, España
Fecha de edición marzo 2012 · Edición nº 1
Idioma español
Traducción de Alonso Valle, Axel
EAN 9788446035138
256 páginas
Libro
Dimensiones 120 mm x 180 mm
Seguramente esta novela, ambientada en Harlem, es la más dramática y emocionante que
escribió Chester Himes. Walker, un amargado policía de Nueva York, se transforma cuando
bebe en un violento salvaje. Un gélido día de invierno, al entrar con paso ebrio en una cafetería,
mata a dos empleados negros sólo porque estaban allí , y persigue a un tercer testigo de los
asesinatos en una de las cacerías con mayor suspense jamás escritas.
Chester Himes, in full Chester Bomar Himes, (born July 29, 1909, Jefferson City, Mo., U.S. died Nov. 12, 1984, Moraira, Spain), African-American writer whose novels reflect his encounters with racism. As an expatriate in Paris, he published a series of black detective novels.<br><br>The domination of his dark-skinned father by his light-skinned mother was a source of deep resentment that shaped Himes's racial outlook. The family's frequent relocations, as well as the accidental blinding of his brother, further disrupted his childhood. Himes attended Ohio State University. From 1929 to 1936 he was jailed at the Ohio State Penitentiary for armed robbery, and while there he began to write fiction. A number of his stories appeared in Esquire and other American magazines. After his release from prison, he worked at numerous odd jobs and joined the Works Progress Administration, eventually serving as a writer with the Ohio Writers' Project.<br><br>His first novel, If He Hollers Let Him Go (1945), details the fear, anger, and humiliation of a black employee of a racist defense plant during World War II. Lonely Crusade (1947) concerns racism in the labour movement. Cast the First Stone (1952) portrays prison life, and The Third Generation (1954) examines family life.
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