Book of a lifetime: Native Son by Richard Wright

From The Independent archive: Caryl Phillips on the American author’s first novel that made him the wealthiest Black writer of his time

Friday 06 October 2023 17:23 BST
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Although Wright went on to write many books, his first novel, ‘Native Son’, is his most famous
Although Wright went on to write many books, his first novel, ‘Native Son’, is his most famous (Gordon Parks/Harper Collins)

The American author Richard Wright is most famous for this one book. It was his first novel, and on its publication in 1940, it became one of the fastest-selling novels in American literary history: a remarkable feat for a 32-year-old, largely self-educated man from Mississippi. It would be fair to say that it changed his life forever. He went on to write many other books, both fiction and non-fiction, but at the time of his death, at the young age of 52 in 1960, many of the obituary notices referenced Wright as the author of just this one book, Native Son.

The novel tells a stark, and somewhat violent, story of a young black man who becomes hardened, and desensitised, by his upbringing in inner-city Chicago. He is an intelligent fellow, but unlike both his sister and his mother, he is not inclined to accept religion into his life as a way of surviving the misery of his existence, nor is he prepared to do as many other men seem to do and reach for the bottle. He takes a respectable job in the house of a wealthy family, but becomes involved in the death of a young woman and finds himself hunted by bigoted officials whom he correctly assumes will neither listen to his version of what happened nor see him as anything other than a brute.

It is one of the great books about inner-city anxiety, and recognisable to a great many individuals who grow up feeling disempowered and disenchanted

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