Iola Leroy: Shadows Uplifted

10 best books like Iola Leroy: Shadows Uplifted (Frances Ellen Watkins Harper): Clotel: or, The President's Daughter, Quicksand, The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man, The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano: Written by Himself, The Street, The Marrow of Tradition, The Rise of Silas Lapham, Our Nig, Plum Bun: A Novel without a Moral, The Garies and Their Friends

AuthorWilliam Wells Brown
ISBN0142437727
First published in December 1853, Clotel was written amid then unconfirmed rumors that Thomas Jefferson had fathered children with one of his slaves. The story begins with the auction of his mistress, here called Currer, and their two daughters, Clotel and Althesa. The Virginian who buys Clotel falls...
Quicksand
AuthorNella Larsen
ISBN0141181273
Born to a white mother and an absent black father, and despised for her dark skin, Helga Crane has long had to fend for herself. As a young woman, Helga teaches at an all-black school in the South, but even here she feels different. Moving to Harlem and eventually to Denmark, she attempts to carve out a comfortable...
The Autobiography of an Ex-Colored Man
AuthorJames Weldon Johnson
ISBN0809000326
James Weldon Johnson's emotionally gripping novel is a landmark in black literary history and, more than eighty years after its original anonymous publication, a classic of American fiction.

The first fictional memoir ever written by a black person, The Autobiography of an Ex-Coloured...
The Interesting Narrative of the Life of Olaudah Equiano: Written by Himself
AuthorOlaudah Equiano
ISBN0312442033
Widely admired for its vivid accounts of the slave trade, Olaudah Equiano's autobiography -- the first slave narrative to attract a significant readership -- reveals many aspects of the eighteenth-century Western world through the experiences of one individual. The second edition reproduces...
The Street
AuthorAnn Petry
ISBN0395901499
The Street tells the poignant, often heartbreaking story of Lutie Johnson, a young black woman, and her spirited struggle to raise her son amid the violence, poverty, and racial dissonance of Harlem in the late 1940s. Originally published in 1946 and hailed by critics as a masterwork, The Street was...
AuthorCharles W. Chesnutt
ISBN0140186867
Things they didn't teach you in American History

I consider myself fortunate to have gone to segregated schools in the Jim Crow South of the 1950's,thanks to teachers who taught us many of the things that were missing from the approved text books. The text books in the Virginia schools would...
AuthorWilliam Dean Howells
ISBN0140390308
Book Review
3 of 5 stars to The Rise of Silas Lapham by William Dean Howells. Most of the works of literature that made up the canon during the late nineteenth century were classified as realistic literature. These realistic works resembled life as realistically as possible, ranging from youthful...
AuthorHarriet E. Wilson
ISBN0142437778
Our Nig is the tale of a mixed-race girl, Frado, abandoned by her white mother after the death of the child's black father. Frado becomes the servant of the Bellmonts, a lower-middle-class white family in the free North, while slavery is still legal in the South, and suffers numerous abuses in their household....
AuthorJessie Redmon Fauset
ISBN0807009199
Written in 1929 at the height of the Harlem Renaissance by one of the movement's most important and prolific authors, Plum Bun is the story of Angela Murray, a young black girl who discovers she can pass for white. After the death of her parents, Angela moves to New York to escape the racism she believes...
AuthorFrank J. Webb
ISBN1426446241
This is a pre-1923 historical reproduction that was curated for quality. Quality assurance was conducted on each of these books in an attempt to remove books with imperfections introduced by the digitization process. Though we have made best efforts - the books may have occasional errors that do not...
AuthorSutton Elbert Griggs
ISBN0812971604
Self-published in 1899 and sold door-to-door by the author, this classic African-American novel—a gripping exploration of oppression, miscegenation, exploitation, and black empowerment—was a major bestseller in its day. The dramatic story of a conciliatory black man and a mulatto nationalist...
The Coquette
AuthorHannah Webster Foster
ISBN0195042395
The Coquette tells the much-publicized story of the seduction and death of Elizabeth Whitman, a poet from Hartford, Connecticut.

Written as a series of letters--between the heroine and her friends and lovers--it describes her long, tortuous courtship by two men, neither of whom perfectly...
Charlotte Temple
AuthorSusanna Rowson
ISBN0195042387
Charlotte Temple, a "best seller" that went through more than 200 editions, was the most popular American novel until Harriet Beecher Stowe's Uncle Tom's Cabin. It tells of a beautiful English girl who at the age of 15 is courted by and runs away with a British lieutenant named Montraville. Once in America,...
About
Feedback
© BooksList.Best 2024