Harlem shadows : the poems of Claude McKay

audiobook

Harlem shadows : the poems of Claude McKay

by Claude McKay

EN·~1 hours·76 chapters

Chapters

76 total

INTRODUCTION

11:17

AUTHOR’S WORD

3:01

HARLEM SHADOWS - THE EASTER FLOWER

0:34

TO ONE COMING NORTH

0:47

AMERICA

0:37

ALFONSO, DRESSING TO WAIT AT TABLE

0:44

THE TROPICS IN NEW YORK

0:32

FLAME-HEART

1:23

HOME THOUGHTS

0:44

ON BROADWAY

0:33

Description

The verses gathered here offer a rare glimpse into the first major poetic voice of a Black writer in the early twentieth century. Though rooted in the specific experience of Caribbean and American Black life, the poems resonate with universal feelings—joy, sorrow, defiance, and a quiet humor that speaks to any listener. Their straightforward, heartfelt language invites you to hear the music of a people asserting their dignity without the need for exotic translation.

Born in a modest Jamaican village, the poet carries the bright colors and rhythms of his island childhood into every line, even as he confronts the harsher realities of urban America. His early work blends the lively dialect of his homeland with a fierce commitment to freedom, recalling family stories of rebellion and the lingering shadows of slavery. As the collection unfolds, you’ll feel the tension between nostalgic longing for sun‑lit hills and the urgent call for social justice that shaped his journey.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~1 hours (65K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Tim Lindell, Chuck Greif and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.)

Release date

2021-04-04

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

Claude McKay

Claude McKay

1890–1948

A powerful voice of the Harlem Renaissance, this Jamaican-born writer brought fierce feeling and sharp political insight to poems, novels, and essays that still feel urgent. Best known for the poem "If We Must Die" and the novel Home to Harlem, he wrote with equal force about race, exile, labor, and belonging.

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