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9780802713629

Chester Himes A Life

by
  • ISBN13:

    9780802713629

  • ISBN10:

    0802713629

  • Format: Hardcover
  • Copyright: 2000-11-01
  • Publisher: Walker Books

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Summary

Chester Himes's novels and memoirs represent one of the most important bodies of work by any American writer, but he is best known for The Harlem Cycle, the crime stories featuring Coffin Ed Johnson and Grave Digger Jones. His writing made him a major figure in Europe, but it is only recently that his talents have been acknowledged in the country that spurned him for most of his life, though his work is recognized as being on a par with that of Raymond Chandler, Dashiell Hammett, and Jim Thompson. In this major literary biography, acclaimed poet, critic, and novelist James Sallis explores Himes's life as no writer has attempted before. Combining the public facts with fresh interviews with the people who knew him best, including his second wife, Lesley, Sallis casts light onto the contradictions, self-interrogations, and misdirections that make Himes such an enigmatic and elusive subject. Chester Himes: A Lifeis a definitive study not only of the life of a major African-American man of letters, but of his writing and its relationship to the man himself, drawing a remarkable, deeply affecting portrait of a too often misunderstood and neglected writer. This is a work of high scholarship and of penetrating and passionate insight, a rare conjoining of two fine writers-and as much a work of literature as any of their novels.

Author Biography

A writer of varied talents, James Sallis is a published poet, critic, translator, and novelist. He has been praised as “a fine talent, introspective, sardonic, a master of quick characterization and narrative compression” (Buffalo News) and as “a rare find…a fine prose stylist with an interest in moral struggle and a gift for the lacerating evocation of loss” (Newsday).

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix
Introduction xi
Unnatural Histories
1(39)
59623
40(20)
``One Way to Be a Nigger''
60(12)
The Things a Writing Man Will Do
72(14)
Round Us Bark the Mad and Hungry Dogs
86(12)
``I'm Still Here''
98(15)
A Street He Could Understand
113(20)
Going Too Far and Too Far Gone
133(16)
``I Don't Have That Much Imagination''
149(20)
Literature Will Not Save You
169(13)
European Experience
182(20)
Story-Shaped Life
202(12)
Doubt, Passion, the Madness of Art
214(11)
Beautiful White Ruins of America
225(16)
A Serious Savage
241(12)
A New Intelligence
253(17)
Gone So Long
270(24)
Black Ruins of My Life
294(17)
The Bad Mother
311(15)
``I Never Found a Place I Fit''
326(9)
Selected Bibliography 335(2)
Works by Chester Himes 337(1)
Notes 338(18)
Index 356

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The New copy of this book will include any supplemental materials advertised. Please check the title of the book to determine if it should include any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

The Used, Rental and eBook copies of this book are not guaranteed to include any supplemental materials. Typically, only the book itself is included. This is true even if the title states it includes any access cards, study guides, lab manuals, CDs, etc.

Excerpts


Chapter One

Unnatural Histories

"That's my life--the third generation out of slavery," Chester Himes ended his 1976 autobiography, a book striking off in so many directions, encompassing so much, that it seems one life could never have contained all this.

    Almost thirty years before, in a speech before a mixed audience at the University of Chicago on "The Dilemma of the Negro Writer in the United States," sounding remarkably like one of his models, Faulkner, Himes had written:

There is an indomitable quality within the human spirit that can not be destroyed; a face deep within the human personality that is impregnable to all assaults ... we would be drooling idiots, dangerous maniacs, raving beasts--if it were not for that quality and force within all humans that cries "I will live."

Himes knew a great deal about such assaults--about assaults of every sort. Champion Ishmael Reed reminds us that by the time Himes reached the age of nineteen, he'd suffered more misfortune than most people experience in a lifetime. Already Himes had survived his parents' contempt and acrimony for one another, his father's slow slide into failure's home plate, his mother's crippling blend of pride and self-hatred, the childhood blinding of brother Joe for which he felt responsible, subterranean life among Cleveland's gamblers, hustlers and high rollers, and, finally, a forty-foot plunge down an elevator shaft that crushed vertebrae, shattered bones, and, though he recovered, left him in a Procrustean brace for years and in pain for the remainder of his life. He'd go on to survive eight years in a state prison, early acclaim as a writer followed by attacks and, far worse, indifference, an ever-mounting sense of failure and frustration, tumultuous affairs leading in one case almost to murder, and, as Himes never lets us forget, a lifetime of pervasive, inescapable racial prejudice.

    Hardly a representative life? Actually, "for all its inconsistencies, its contradictions, its humiliations, its triumphs, its failures, its tragedies, its hurts, its ecstasies and its absurdities," it is.

    In prison Himes had come to believe that people will do anything, absolutely anything. "Why should I be surprised when white men cut out some poor black man's nuts, or when black men eat the tasty palms of white explorers?" This belief, along with his own inner turmoil, accounts in large part for the level of violence and abrupt shifts of plot in his work, not to mention the absurd comedy, that so distinguish it. We grow to expect sudden desperate acts from characters who in fact often seem little more than a series of such acts strung together. Pianos and drunken preachers may fall from the sky, children may be fed from troughs like barnyard animals, stolen automobile wheels may roll on their own through most of Harlem, precipitating a chain of unrelated, calamitous events. In Himes's absurd world, Aristotelian logic holds no purchase; neither characters nor readers may rely on cause and effect. We can't anticipate the consequences of acts, have no way to predict what might be around the next corner, on the next page. It could be literally anything. So we're forever off balance, handholds having turned to razors, cups of wine to blood. We look out from eyes filled with a nebulous, free-floating fear that never leaves us. We can depend on nothing, expect anything. And nothing is safe.

    Much like his work, Himes's life is filled with contradictions and uncertainties, sudden turns, stabs of violence, dark centers at the heart of light. In his time he was no easy man to know; time's filters haven't changed that. There is so much of the life, so many things done, so many places lived, so many apparent selves and so rich an internal life, that, every bit as much as his fiction, Himes's life seems always overblown, exaggerated, too vivid--as though all experience has been rendered down to one single dark, rich stock.

    One often feels that it is only the centripetal force of the tensions within him that keeps Himes's world from flying wholly apart. He seems a man who must always work everything out for himself and by himself, creating self and world anew with each effort at understanding.

    Whatever they and their jacket notes claim, the majority of writers lead dull lives. They spend much of their lives alone in rooms staring at blank pages or half-filled screens. When not in those rooms, they wander half-lost about the house, quarrel with wives and lovers, drink, worry about their work going out of print or not finding a publisher, read new books to see who might be getting a leg up on them, share with other writers complaints over the horrible state of publishing.

    Himes's life, on the other hand, is at least as fascinating as his fiction.

    Autobiographical elements, of course, even appropriations of entire lives, are common in literature. Zuckerman is Roth in a funhouse mirror, Henry or Mr. Bones opens his mouth to let out John Berryman's words, Joyce cocoons his childhood in the guise of Stephen Daedalus: artful dodgers all. So one hesitates to insist too closely upon the link between writer and written. Perhaps especially in the case of Himes one hesitates. His late memoirs are rife with conflation and confabulation, highly suspect. Memory at best is an uncertain instrument, and the two volumes of autobiography Himes wrote when well past sixty resound with errors of fact, skewed sequences, even incorrect dates for central experiences. Nor does Himes ever back away from adorning fact, sending it out dressed in Sunday best or in rags according to his need, so that often the books are more documents of his emotions and reactions, of states of mind, than they are a record of the life lived. By selection and emphasis, then, the memoirs become as fictive in their own way as his novel The Third Generation , which in turn seems as much masked autobiography as fiction. And who is this writer, so much like Himes yet clearly invented, darting and skittering and peering out through the pages of The Primitive?

    When Himes spoke of The Third Generation as his "most dishonest novel," it's just this manifest use of fact to which he may have been referring, this sense that he had failed in some elementary manner the mandates of fiction. Here Himes is writing so close to his own life that only crawlspaces remain.

    Himes's life and fiction seem uniquely linked, then; if in complex ways, and his work, for all its apparent diversity, uniquely of a piece.

    Chester Himes was no great thinker, never claiming a place among intellectuals. With a handful of exceptions, notably his 1948 speech at the University of Chicago, whenever he touched on ideas he spoke in commonplaces, and often as not what he shows in his work "may subvert what he says. He was , however, a marvelous observer and prodigious inventor, working by instinct towards attainment of discoveries and a singular vision irreducible to mere ideas.

    Himes could be shockingly un observant, even unmindful, of his own life and motives. Repeatedly, he let himself drift or be drawn into impossible situations. There was about him often a baffling passivity, a disengagement, that reminds us he spent formative adult years in prison and clashes oddly with the man's obvious passion. Again and again he voiced astonishment at actions or inactions that led (quite predictably, we should have thought) to disaster. Yet in his work he took close notice of the world from perspectives rarely encountered, convincing us with the sheer physicality of his writing, spinning out scenes we've never read before. When Himes writes of Harlem, you see the cars sunk like elephants onto tireless front wheels, cafés with hand-lettered signs and hustlers in tight bunches on corners; smell rotting garbage, sweat, bad grease, the sweet stench of pomades. When he shows Bob Jones and Kriss awakening in If He Hollers Let Him Go and The Primitive respectively, you feel what they feel, all the fear, self-hatred and confusion beating at the inner walls of selves.

    Critic James Lundquist has called the opening chapter of Blind Man with a Pistol , with its hundred-year-old "black Mormon" advertising for a new wife to keep the number at twelve, with its stinking stewpot of chicken's feet and chitterlings and feeding troughs for children, "without exaggeration ... one of the strangest in American literature." The final scene of the same book, with Himes's once-powerful detectives Grave Digger Jones and Coffin Ed Johnson standing by helplessly shooting rats as full-scale riot breaks around them, is little less strange or memorable.

An hour later Lieutenant Anderson had Grave Digger on the radio-phone. "Can't you men stop that riot?" he demanded.

"It's out of hand, boss," Grave Digger said.

"All right, I'll call for reinforcements. What started it?"

"A blind man with a pistol.'

"What's that?"

"You heard me, boss."

"That don't make any sense."

"Sure don't."

In the second volume of his autobiography, My Life of Absurdity , Himes describes "a painting I had seen in my youth of black soldiers clad in Union Army uniforms down on their hands and knees viciously biting the dogs the Southern rebels had turned on them, their big white dangerous teeth sinking into the dogs' throats while the dogs yelped futilely." That painting has always seemed profoundly emblematic of Himes's work. The terrible ambivalence of the black's place in society, Himes's own bitterness and rage, elements of graphic violence and opéra bouffe --this brief description of a painting seen fleetingly in youth describes as well four decades of work from one of America's most neglected and misunderstood major writers.

    In Cakes and Ale , Somerset Maugham summarized the literary vocation thus:

I began to meditate on the writer's life. It is full of tribulation. First he must endure poverty and the world's indifference; then, having achieved a measure of success, he must submit with a good grace to its hazards. He depends upon a fickle public. He is at the mercy of journalists who want to interview him and photographers who want to take his picture, of editors who harry him for copy and tax gatherers who harry him for income tax ... of agents, publishers, managers, bores, admirers, critics, and his own conscience. But he has one compensation. Whenever he has anything on his mind, whether it be a harassing reflection, grief at the death of a friend, unrequited love, wounded pride, anger at the treachery of someone to whom he has shown kindness, in short any emotion or any perplexing thought, he has only to put down in black and white, using it as the theme of a story or the decoration of an essay, to forget all about it. He is the only free man.

Chester Himes never forgot anything, least of all his pride and anger. At no time during his life did poverty and the world's indifference remove themselves far from his side. Chester Himes was never a free man.

Chester Bomar Himes was born in Jefferson City, Missouri, the state capital, on July 29, 1909, "across the street from the entrance to Lincoln Institute, where my father, Professor Joseph Sandy Himes, taught blacksmithing and wheelwrighting as head of the Mechanical Department." Chester was the youngest of three brothers: Eddie, eight years his senior; Joseph Jr., with whom Chester became in youth inseparable, but one. No original birth certificate survives; in April of 1942, offering as documentation a family record of birth (most likely a family bible) and WPA employment records, Himes applied for and received a "delayed or special" certificate.

    Part of a network of land-grant Negro schools throughout the South, Lincoln Institute's curriculum was split into two parts, agricultural and mechanical; today's A&M colleges retain this nomenclature. Many of these colleges occupied campuses of formerly white schools. Alcorn College in Mississippi, for instance, where Joseph Sandy Himes later taught, moved onto a campus vacated by the state university's relocation to Oxford, where the latter became known as Ole Miss ("made famous by William Faulkner and James Meredith," Himes writes in a typical remark). Other such facilities were ramshackle aggregations of buildings. Most were rurally located. Himes remembered his father quoting Booker T. Washington on the subject of these schools: "Let down your buckets where you are."

    Lincoln Institute, founded in 1866 with $6,000 contributed by regiments of Negro volunteers from the Civil War, by 1914 had an enrollment of 435. Benjamin F. Allen's presidency from 1902 to 1918 brought marked physical improvement, including a central heating system and, in 1908, wiring of all campus buildings for electricity, as well as new emphasis on students' cultural development. A portrait of the 1912 faculty shows and lists "Joseph S. Himes, blacksmithing." His annual salary is given as $700. In the Jefferson City Directory this entry appears: "Himes, Joseph S (col Estella B) instructor Lincoln Inst, r 710 Lafayette."

    Jefferson City at that time had a population of around 15,000 and covered an area just under four square miles, with twenty-three miles of paved streets. A 1904 ordinance set the city speed limit at nine miles an hour. The Jefferson City Post in 1908 wrote of an auto trip from Kansas City to Jefferson City in an astonishingly brief fourteen hours.

    Himes, who was to become the chronicler of America's great dispossessed, began not in poverty, then, but in a black middle class that few Americans even suspect existed at the time. Joseph Sandy Himes was, by his own standards and those of the community at large, a man of substantial prospects.

    Son of a slave, Joseph Sandy Himes never knew his father's first name, knew only that he had been bought off the slave block by a man named Heinz or Himes who trained him as a blacksmith. The end of the Civil War found Joseph's father in his mid-twenties and a father of four. With little real choice, he remained on his former master's plantation but after a quarrel with an overseer, whom he almost certainly attacked, perhaps killed, he fled, abandoning his first family.

    Second wife Mary, herself an ex-slave from Georgia, bore him five children before dying of consumption. Joseph Sandy, Himes's father, was the middle child, born in North Carolina, fourteen at the time of Mary's death. Working at a variety of menial jobs, he put himself through South Carolina's Claflin College; he may also have attended Boston Mechanical Institute.

    Now he taught metal trades, blacksmithing, and wheelwrighting and was called Professor Himes. At one college he also taught Negro history from texts that Chester wondered about but never saw again. There's something Hephaestian about descriptions of Joseph: short, broad-shouldered and muscular, barrel chest set squarely on bowed legs. He had dark blue eyes, an ellipsoidal skull, and a large hooked nose that both his wife and son Chester referred to as Arabic. Joseph Sandy seems to have been an artisan of great skill. From The Third Generation :

He was a fine blacksmith and wheelwright. His students had built some of the best carriages and wagons seen in that city. He could make the most elaborate indirons and coal tongs and gates and lampposts imaginable. He had made jewelry and lamps and dishes from gold and silver. He was an artist at the forge and anvil. There was practically nothing he couldn't forge from metal.

Almost certainly it was Joseph's ambition that attracted Estelle to him. In all other ways, physically, emotionally, in their background, they were markedly unalike. Himes spoke in later years of his father's slave mentality "which accepts the premise that white people knew best," whereas mother Estelle "hated all manner of condescension from white people." This contrast of attitudes was to establish in Himes networks of ambivalence extending to virtually every facet of his life. Initially, though, Estelle admired Joseph for the distance he had traveled; his by-the-bootstraps edification echoed her own family's self-elevation through hard work and determination. And, always, Estelle Bomar was a great seer not of what is but of what could be, a woman who, had she read Wallace Stevens, might have adopted "Let be be finale of seem" as her creed. In Joseph Sandy she saw not a simple teacher of practical skills. She saw a future dean, an administrator. Unfortunately Joseph had progressed as far as he was ever likely to go, and Estelle's relentless pushing for his advancement served only to cause him difficulties with superiors and to open marital rifts that with the years became unbreachable, till finally both he and the marriage broke on that wheel.

    Estelle always felt she'd married beneath her, and in the last analysis believed the Negro colleges themselves demeaning. She was being held back by circumstance, by Joseph's lack of a resolve to match her own, and if she did not take steps, that same waywardness would claim her sons. Estelle pushed ever harder. "She could make allowances if he were a success." She and Joseph quarreled bitterly again and again, endlessly, as young Chester and his brothers looked on "whimpering and trembling in terror."

"I want my children to look like me," he muttered.

"So they can grow up handicapped and despised?"

"Despised!" His face took on a lowering look. "What do you mean, despised? I suppose you think I'm handicapped and despised?"

"Aren't you?" The question startled him. "Can't you see," she went on, "I want the children to have it better, not just be common pickaninnies."

"Pickaninnies!" Her thoughtless remark cut him to the quick. "That's better than being white men's leavings."

She whitened with fury. It was the second time he'd slurred her parents but this time was all the more hurting because they were dead, and she revered their memory. Striking back, she said witheringly, "You're nothing but a shanty nigger and never will be anything else. And you would love nothing better than to have my children turn out to be as low and common as yourself."

With the years, giving up on high expectations she'd had for his father, Estelle seems to have transferred those expectations, and ultimately her profound disappointment as well, onto Chester.

    In any account of Himes's life, it's at this point--in family recollections, biographical sketches, in Himes's novel The Third Generation --that Joseph begins to fade away. He moves from one job to another, each a retreat, each a notch or two down on the jack; he ends up doing manual labor, waiting tables, janitoring. Ghetto life in St. Louis and Cleveland completes the rift between parents. The children drift away. With Estelle very near madness, the parents are divorced.

    It's difficult to assess to what degree Joseph's defeat arose internally, from lack of willfulness, some failure of will; which from his limited background and always tenuous position as a minimally educated black man in white society; and which from the pride and caprice of wife Estelle. More than once her refusal to mix with other blacks, her insistence upon being treated as though she were white, her confrontations with neighbors, college peers, and shopkeepers, led to a compromise in Joseph's position, even to loss of a job. Broader social factors were at work here as well. Increased segregation led to fewer opportunities for Negroes to improve their lot, as Estelle's parents had done, as merchants and in general service to whites. Meanwhile, increasing urbanization, industrialization, and rapidly advancing technology were well on the way to rendering trades such as those Joseph taught obsolete.

    With ongoing, ever more outright marital discord, with the dominolike series of retreats, and finally with his inability to support his family by manual work, all he can attain to after the move North, Joseph's spirit falters and fails. He becomes the very image of the black man ground down, unable to care for his family. We know from his early history that Joseph once had great resolve. We know that he was a hard worker, a skilled artisan, a dedicated teacher. We know from Chester's descriptions that Joseph for many years possessed considerable personal dignity and a pride that if not on the gargantuan order of his wife's was equally manifest. ("Only his wife could make him feel inferior.") And with what we know of family dynamics we recognize the emotional balance Joseph must have had, and the emotional expenditures he must have made, continually to counterbalance Estelle's excesses and bring the family back to an even keel. Finally Joseph seems to have exhausted his personal capital--seems to have been used up. To Estelle, this was proof of what she had suspected all along. God knows she'd done what she could to help this man make something more of himself. All to no avail.

    An octoroon with hazel or gray eyes, aquiline nose, and straight auburn hair, Estelle Bomar looked "like a white woman who had suffered a long siege of illness." Often Estelle seems, from accounts, a woman comprised entirely of adjectives: genteel, churchgoing, cultured, prideful, proper, driven, ambitious. She spoke constantly of their heritage and drilled her sons in the necessity of living up to it while squeezing the bridges of their noses to keep them from becoming flat. If Joseph's mind shaped itself around coals of accommodation and melioration, then Estelle's danced over flames of indignation and impatience. In some manner, hers was the ultimate Republican dream: to re-create what never existed. In another, or certainly it must have seemed so to her, she was doing what had to be done--at that time, given that history. Estelle, like her son Chester, possessed a talent for living as though events that had not yet occurred, but that should occur, already had. Chester often seemed to catch on to things twenty or thirty years before anyone else did. Speaking of the Watts riots in the sixties, he remarked how surprising it was that they'd waited so long to happen.

    Look how far we've come with our superior blood and breeding, Estelle told her sons in a kind of litany. And it's true that all three went on to great achievements, even if Chester in later years wrote Carl Van Vechten: "As I look back now, I feel that much of my retardation as a writer has been due to a subconscious (and conscious and deliberate) desire to escape my past. All mixed up no doubt with the Negro's desire for respectability. It brought a lot of confusion to my mind." This fundamental conflict within himself--of black versus white values, but just as importantly of patrician versus egalitarian--became perhaps the central theme in Himes's life.

    Estelle's accounts of her background, of that heritage she held so important, changed with time, elaborated and edited in ways reminiscent of her son's later memoirs. Any narrative, after all, whether oral history, memoir, or fiction, takes shape from what, among countless possibilities, is chosen: what foregrounded, what passed over quickly. Memory, too, is a kind of storyteller, often more poet than reporter, selecting and rearranging details to correspond to some image we have of ourselves, or simply to make a better story.

    Estelle's grandmother was born either to an Indian squaw or African princess, depending on when the story was told, and to an Irish overseer. Malinda, Estelle's mother, light-skinned like herself, grew up to become handservant to a Carolina doctor named Cleveland who traced his own heritage back through a Revolutionary War general to British aristocracy. Despite laws forbidding literacy to slaves, Malinda was taught to read, perhaps by her master's daughter. Malinda in turn gave birth to three children, two of them quite likely sired by Dr. Cleveland, the third by an Indian slave. Following the Civil War, Malinda married Chester Bomar, "a tall fair white-looking man with a long blond beard," himself the issue of an octoroon and master John Earl Bomar.

    Chester, Malinda, and Malinda's three children lived in Spartanburg, South Carolina, on land ceded them by Chester's former master. Chester apprenticed as a brick mason while Malinda worked as a wet nurse and took in washing. Selling their land three years later, using money from the Freedman's Bureau for transportation, they moved to Dalton, Georgia, where Chester worked as a stonemason. Within two years they relocated again, this time to Atlanta, hoping for steadier work. Chester there fell ill, and upon his recovery the family returned to Spartanburg, bringing with them three new children, Estelle, the youngest, born in February 1874. Chester and son Tom set up as builders, counting among their achievements the region's first large cotton mills. They worked fiercely, every Bomar pitching in to do his part, pushing past setbacks, persevering, and by 1890 the family was well established in the local Negro bourgeoisie. Chester served his church as deacon, superintendent of the Sunday school and financial adviser.

    This bourgeoisie was a new thing in the world, and like most new things, fragile. Years later Chester Himes would say of fellow black Americans that "The face may be the face of Africa, but the heart has the beat of Wall Street." He would spend much of his life alternately courting and railing against middle-class white values, an exemplar of double consciousness as described by W. E. B. Du Bois,

this sense of always looking at one's self through the eyes of others ... One ever feels his twoness,--an American, a Negro; two souls, two thoughts, two unreconciled strivings; two warring ideals in one dark body, whose dogged strength alone keeps it from being torn asunder.

(Continues...)

Copyright © 2000 James Sallis. All rights reserved.

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