Arna Bontemps

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Arna Wendell Bontemps (1902–73) was an American author. His works include God Sends Sunday (1931), Drums at Dusk (1939), Sam Patch (1951), and One Hundred Years of Negro Freedom (1961).[1]

Life and Works

Bontemps was born on October 13, 1902, in Alexandria, Louisiana to a black brick mason father and a European-Indian mother.[2] At age three, his family moved to Los Angeles, where he refused to go into his father's trade, was sent to a white boarding school, and later graduated Pacific Union College with a BA in 1923.[3] He moved to Harlem, New York, married, and accepted a teaching job during the Harlem Renaissance, where he met W.E.B. DuBois, Countee Cullen, and his best friend, Langston Hughes.[4] He won poetry prizes from The Crisis and Opportunity there, but moved to Huntsville, Alabama during the Depression, and later to Tennessee.[5]

He began to write novels with Chariot in the Cloud (1929), which was rejected, and became very famous for God Sends Sunday and Popo and Fifina: Children of Haiti (1932), a children's book co-written by Langston Hughes.[6] His God Sends Sunday described a black jockey of the 1890s called Little Augie and his losing his luck in Mudtown, a fictitious suburb of Watts, California.[7] His next novels, Black Thunder (1936) and Drums at Dusk, were about slave revolts in Virginia and Haiti, respectively.[8] One of his best known works his the children's history Story of the Negro (1949), a Newbery winner.[9]

He died on June 4, 1973, in Nashville, Tennessee, while working on his autobiography.

References

External links