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Cast the First Stone (1952) - Druckversion +- Forums (https://funtailix.com/portal) +-- Forum: EBOOK (https://funtailix.com/portal/forumdisplay.php?fid=29) +--- Forum: EBOOK (https://funtailix.com/portal/forumdisplay.php?fid=30) +--- Thema: Cast the First Stone (1952) (/showthread.php?tid=3070) |
Cast the First Stone (1952) - Simon - 03-14-2026 Here is Chester Himes' great novel that rips aside the barred doors of prison life. An unforgettable story of what happens to a man in prison; a vivid re-creation of a perverse society with its own rules, its own taboos, its own virtues and grotesque vices..... A classic restored -- the complete and unexpurgated text of the first, most powerful, and most autobiographical novel of this great African-American writer. In 1937 Chester Himes, newly released from a seven-year stretch in the Ohio State Penitentiary for grand larceny, finished his first novel, Yesterday Will Make You Cry. By turns brutal and lyrical and never less than totally honest, it tells the autobiographical story of young Jimmy Monroe's passage through the prison system, which tests the limits of his sanity, his capacity for suffering, and his definition of love. Stunningly candid about racism, homosexuality, and prison corruption, the book would take sixteen years and four subsequent revisions before being published in much altered form as "Cast the First Stone" in 1952. Even bowdlerized, it was recognized as a sardonic masterpiece of debasement and transfiguration.This edition presents for the first time the book precisely as Himes intended it to be read, with its raw honesty and startling compassion entirely intact. It now stands definitively as one of the great novels of prison life and one of Himes's most enduring literary achievements. Code: "Cast the First Stone" was published as Chester Himes' third novel. In fact, it was begun before both "If He Hollers Let Him Go" (1942) and "Lonely Crusade" (1947) but struggled to find a publisher. What was eventually released by Coward McCann in 1952 barely resembles Himes' original manuscript, having been rewritten multiple times by the author and suffering through heavy editing and reordering by the publisher. An author in the vein of Richard Wright and James Baldwin, Himes left the US after this disappointing experience with the publishing industry. He would relocate to Paris where he later gained success for a series of novels set in Harlem featuring two black police detectives, Gravedigger Jones and Coffin Ed Johnson. In 1998, Himes' original manuscript, under the original title, "Yesterday Will Make You Cry" was published by Norton, restoring an important literary work. |