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3.0 

Home to Harlem

By Claude McKay & Wayne F. Cooper
Home to Harlem by Claude McKay & Wayne F. Cooper digital book - Fable

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Publisher Description

A Black American longshoreman struggles to feel at home after returning from service in WWI in this classic Harlem Renaissance novel.

When America joins World War I in 1917, Jake Brown enlists, ready to fight the Germans and become a hero. Yet when he arrives in France, he’s treated more like a slave than a soldier. He spends his time toting around lumber and picking fights with his white comrades. After deserting his post, he finds work and contentment in London’s East End. But a race riot soon drives him to return home to Harlem . . .

Back in the United States, Jake longs to settle down. He searches for work, friendship, and love, but to find and keep them proves challenging, especially while Jake is haunted by the violence of his past. Still, he chooses to rise above it all . . .

Originally published in 1928, Home to Harlem renders a lively portrait of the New York City neighborhood in the 1920s, while depicting the life of single, working-class, Black men in the industrial Northeast following the First World War.

31 Reviews

3.0
“This is the first McKay novel I have read and I am pleasantly surprised by how much I enjoyed it. A simple story of a soldier who went AWOL in Europe (WWI) and has returned to 20s Harlem. However, despite its simplicity, I found its observations pretty interesting and its characters pretty relatable. I love the personal stories told and the nightlife it portrays. We always hear of the roaring 20s from the perspective of white people so it was good to be immersed in such a black story of joy, celebration and hedonism in the 20s. It’s a solid read minus the shoddy ending and the dialect in dialogue that some (not me) might find difficult to read.”

About Claude McKay

Claude McKay was a Jamaican-American writer and poet, and a central figure in the Harlem Renaissance. In 1919, McKay wrote, “If We Must Die,” one of his best-known works. He composed five novels and several collections of poetry and short stories. His 1922 poetry collection, Harlem Shadows, was among the first books published during the Harlem Renaissance. By the late 1930s, McKay’s anti-Stalinism isolated him from other Harlem intellectuals, and by 1942, he had converted to Catholicism and left Harlem, working for a Catholic organization until his death.

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