cover image The Several Lives of Chester Himes

The Several Lives of Chester Himes

Edward Margolies, Michael J. Fabre. University Press of Mississippi, $50 (209pp) ISBN 978-0-87805-908-9

As an American who preferred Europe, a published author with a hatred of publishers and a serious writer best known for the potboilers he wrote late in his career, Himes (1909-1984) was also an acerbic African American of partial white ancestry who reduced his contradictory circumstances and nature to race, declaring ""if one is a Negro, one is absurd."" After eight years in jail for armed robbery committed at age 19 and a homosexual relationship he would later call the most fulfilling of his, Himes produced a wealth of pulpy short stories for Esquire and other magazines in the '30s and '40s, as well as several novels on racial themes (most famously, If He Hollers Let Him Go) which he thought were deliberately smothered by their publishers. Moving to the '50s Paris of better-known friends James Baldwin and Richard Wright, Himes began to write a genre-blending series of what he called Harlem domestic detective stories--seething policiers, such as A Rage in Harlem, that indicted American interracial relations. These often centered on an idea he applied in his life as well: that black men could heal white women, as both were oppressed by white men. Margolies and Fabre, two American studies professors who knew Himes during the last 20 years of his life, draw generously upon Himes's work, letters and notoriously untrustworthy memoirs for this concise, matter-of-fact biography, neither fawning over nor condescending to their complex subject, whose work and life showed his dual obsessions with violence and reform. (June)