As well-known as The Harlem Renaissance has become in American Culture, with its bigger-than-life luminaries in literatures, music, art and theater, little is known about the ordinary, everyday Harlem folks and their lives – until now.
Perhaps, for the first time and in poetic format, the veil is pulled aside to reveal an indepth picture of what it meant to be in Harlem during the Renaissance.
Over de auteur
Paul Evans is a former reporter and managing editor at The Baltimore Afro-American and a former columnist at The Baltimore Sun. He has been an English department faculty member at colleges and universities in Baltimore where he taught Freshman Composition, American Literature, black American Literature, and The Harlem Renaissance. A graduate of Morgan State and Johns Hopkins universities, Mr. Evans resides in Baltimore and continues his academic career. His e-mail address is [email protected].