The Big Sea: An Autobiography

Front Cover
Macmillan, 1993 - Biography & Autobiography - 335 pages
0 Reviews
Reviews aren't verified, but Google checks for and removes fake content when it's identified

Introduction by Arnold Rampersad.

Langston Hughes, born in 1902, came of age early in the 1920s. In The Big Sea he recounts those memorable years in the two great playgrounds of the decade--Harlem and Paris. In Paris he was a cook and waiter in nightclubs. He knew the musicians and dancers, the drunks and dope fiends. In Harlem he was a rising young poet--at the center of the "Harlem Renaissance."

Arnold Rampersad writes in his incisive new introduction to The Big Sea, an American classic: "This is American writing at its best--simpler than Hemingway; as simple and direct as that of another Missouri-born writer...Mark Twain."

 

What people are saying - Write a review

We haven't found any reviews in the usual places.

Contents

Page 30
3
Page 31
4
Page 32
5
Page 33
6
Page 34
7
Page 35
8
Page 36
9
Page 37
10
Page 197
170
Page 198
171
Page 199
172
Page 200
173
Page 201
174
Page 202
175
Page 203
176
Page 204
177

Page 38
11
Page 39
12
Page 40
13
Page 41
14
Page 42
15
Page 43
16
Page 44
17
Page 45
18
Page 46
19
Page 47
20
Page 48
21
Page 49
22
Page 50
23
Page 51
24
Page 52
25
Page 53
26
Page 54
27
Page 55
28
Page 56
29
Page 57
30
Page 58
31
Page 59
32
Page 60
33
Page 61
34
Page 62
35
Page 63
36
Page 64
37
Page 65
38
Page 66
39
Page 67
40
Page 68
41
Page 69
42
Page 70
43
Page 71
44
Page 72
45
Page 73
46
Page 74
47
Page 75
48
Page 76
49
Page 77
50
Page 78
51
Page 79
52
Page 80
53
Page 81
54
Page 82
55
Page 83
56
Page 84
57
Page 85
58
Page 86
59
Page 87
60
Page 88
61
Page 89
62
Page 90
63
Page 91
64
Page 92
65
Page 93
66
Page 94
67
Page 95
68
Page 96
69
Page 97
70
Page 98
71
Page 99
72
Page 100
73
Page 101
74
Page 102
75
Page 103
76
Page 104
77
Page 105
78
Page 106
79
Page 107
80
Page 108
81
Page 109
82
Page 110
83
Page 111
84
Page 112
85
Page 113
86
Page 114
87
Page 115
88
Page 116
89
Page 117
90
Page 118
91
Page 119
92
Page 120
93
Page 121
94
Page 122
95
Page 123
96
Page 124
97
Page 125
98
Page 126
99
Page 127
100
Page 128
101
Page 129
102
Page 130
103
Page 131
104
Page 132
105
Page 133
106
Page 134
107
Page 135
108
Page 136
109
Page 137
110
Page 138
111
Page 139
112
Page 140
113
Page 141
114
Page 142
115
Page 143
116
Page 144
117
Page 145
118
Page 146
119
Page 147
120
Page 148
121
Page 149
122
Page 150
123
Page 151
124
Page 152
125
Page 153
126
Page 154
127
Page 155
128
Page 156
129
Page 157
130
Page 158
131
Page 159
132
Page 160
133
Page 161
134
Page 162
135
Page 163
136
Page 164
137
Page 165
138
Page 166
139
Page 167
140
Page 168
141
Page 169
142
Page 170
143
Page 171
144
Page 172
145
Page 173
146
Page 174
147
Page 175
148
Page 176
149
Page 177
150
Page 178
151
Page 179
152
Page 180
153
Page 181
154
Page 182
155
Page 183
156
Page 184
157
Page 185
158
Page 186
159
Page 187
160
Page 188
161
Page 189
162
Page 190
163
Page 191
164
Page 192
165
Page 193
166
Page 194
167
Page 195
168
Page 196
169
Page 205
178
Page 206
179
Page 207
180
Page 208
181
Page 209
182
Page 210
183
Page 211
184
Page 212
185
Page 213
186
Page 214
187
Page 215
188
Page 216
189
Page 217
190
Page 218
191
Page 219
192
Page 220
193
Page 221
194
Page 222
195
Page 223
196
Page 224
197
Page 225
198
Page 226
199
Page 227
200
Page 228
201
Page 229
202
Page 230
203
Page 231
204
Page 232
205
Page 233
206
Page 234
207
Page 235
208
Page 236
209
Page 237
210
Page 238
211
Page 239
212
Page 240
213
Page 241
214
Page 242
215
Page 243
216
Page 244
217
Page 245
218
Page 246
219
Page 247
220
Page 248
221
Page 249
222
Page 250
223
Page 251
224
Page 252
225
Page 253
226
Page 254
227
Page 255
228
Page 256
229
Page 257
230
Page 258
231
Page 259
232
Page 260
233
Page 261
234
Page 262
235
Page 263
236
Page 264
237
Page 265
238
Page 266
239
Page 267
240
Page 268
241
Page 269
242
Page 270
243
Page 271
244
Page 272
245
Page 273
246
Page 274
247
Page 275
248
Page 276
249
Page 277
250
Page 278
251
Page 279
252
Page 280
253
Page 281
254
Page 282
255
Page 283
256
Page 284
257
Page 285
258
Page 286
259
Page 287
260
Page 288
261
Page 289
262
Page 290
263
Page 291
264
Page 292
265
Page 293
266
Page 294
267
Page 295
268
Page 296
269
Page 297
270
Page 298
271
Page 299
272
Page 300
273
Page 301
274
Page 302
275
Page 303
276
Page 304
277
Page 305
278
Page 306
279
Page 307
280
Page 308
281
Page 309
282
Page 310
283
Page 311
284
Page 312
285
Page 313
286
Page 314
287
Page 315
288
Page 316
289
Page 317
290
Page 318
291
Page 319
292
Page 320
293
Page 321
294
Page 322
295
Page 323
296
Page 324
297
Page 325
298
Page 326
299
Page 327
300
Page 328
301
Page 329
302
Page 330
303
Page 331
304
Page 332
305
Page 333
306
Page 334
307
Page 335
308
Page 336
309
Page 337
310
Page 338
311
Page 339
312
Page 340
313
Page 341
314
Page 342
315
Page 343
316
Page 344
317
Page 345
318
Page 346
319
Page 347
320
Page 348
321
Page 349
322
Page 350
323
Page 351
324
Page 352
325
Page 353
326
Page 354
327
Page 355
328
Page 356
329
Page 357
330
Page 358
331
Page 359
332
Page 360
333
Page 361
334
Page 362
335
Copyright

Other editions - View all

Common terms and phrases

About the author (1993)

Langston Hughes was born in Joplin, Missouri, went to Cleveland, Ohio, lived for a number of years in Chicago, and long resided in New York City's Harlem. He graduated from Lincoln University in 1929 and was awarded an honorary Litt. D. in 1943. He was perhaps best known as a poet and the creator of Simple, but he also wrote novels, biography, history, plays (several of them Broadway hits), and children's books, and he edited several anthologies. Mr. Hughes died in 1967.

Arnold Rampersad, author of the widely acclaimed biography The Life of Langston Hughes, is Woodrow Wilson Professor of Literature and director of American Studies at Princeton University.

Bibliographic information