Tropic Death
Eric Walrond (Author)
With an Introduction by Arnold Rampersad
A Liveright book
Finally available after three decades, a lost classic of the Harlem Renaissance that Langston Hughes acclaimed for its “hard poetic beauty.”
Eric Walrond (1898–1966), in his only book, injected a profound Caribbean sensibility into black literature. His work was closest to that of Jean Toomer and Zora Neale Hurston with its striking use of dialect and its insights into the daily lives of the people around him. Growing up in British Guiana, Barbados, and Panama, Walrond first published Tropic Death to great acclaim in 1926. This book of stories viscerally charts the days of men working stone quarries or building the Panama Canal, of women tending gardens and rearing needy children. Early on addressing issues of skin color and class, Walrond imbued his stories with a remarkable compassion for lives controlled by the whims of nature. Despite his early celebrity, he died in London in 1966 with minimal recognition given to his passing. Arnold Rampersad’s elegant introduction reclaims this classic work and positions Walrond alongside the prominent writers of his age.
Book Details
- Hardcover
- January 2013
-
ISBN 978-0-87140-335-3
- 5.9 × 7.8 in
/ 192 pages
- Territory Rights: Worldwide
Other Formats
-
Paperback
Endorsements & Reviews
“Tropic Death announced one of the Harlem Renaissance's most original writers. Walrond's short story collection captured the polyglot culture of Panama's poor in the maw of empire with a Gothic surrealism that fascinates and repels the the intensity of a sunstroke. It's wonderful to have this reissue with Arnold Rampersad's perceptive new introduction.” — David Levering Lewis, author of God's Crucible
All Subjects