"I was preoccupied with books by black people that approached the subject, but I always missed some intimacy, some direction, some voice. Ralph Ellison and Richard Wright-all of whose books I admire enormously-I didn't feel were telling me something. I thought they were saying something about it or us that revealed something about us to you, to others, to white people, to men. Just in terms of the style, I missed something in the fiction that I felt in a real sense in the music and poetry of black artists. When I began writing I was writing as though there was nobody in the world but me and the characters, as though I was talking to them, or us, and it just had a different sound to it."
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Novelists from the United StatesNon-fiction authors from the United StatesPoets from the United StatesExistentialistsAutobiographers from the United States
Original Language: English
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From a 1981 interview in Danille K. Taylor-Guthrie (ed.) Conversations with Toni Morrison (1994)
https://en.wikiquote.org/wiki/Richard_Wright
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Richard Wright
Richard Nathaniel Wright (4 September 1908 – 28 November 1960) was an American novelist and writer of short stories and non-fiction.
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