SHAFT
First edition of Tidyman's famous novel, with a rare, long, and affectionate inscription from the author to longtime DETROIT NEWS columnist Bill Noble.
First edition of Tidyman's famous novel, with a rare, long, and affectionate inscription from the author to longtime DETROIT NEWS columnist Bill Noble.
First printing of this landmark work engaging with the generational trauma of slavery, edited by Toni Morrison and lavishly praised by James Baldwin and Angela Davis.
First edition – with cover design by Aaron Douglas – of this foundational Harlem Renaissance work, the story of Emma Lou, a dark-skinned Black woman who struggles to come to terms with the colorism she experiences inside and outside her community.
Inscribed first edition of the first book of Lilith's Brood, also known as the Xenogenesis trilogy.
Signed first printing of the fourth book in the Patternist series — inscribed to the owner of an important Black bookstore.
First edition of William Melvin Kelley's first novel, the story of an exodus of the Black population from a fictional Southern US American state after a traumatic event.
Inscribed first edition in English of this "elegiac reminiscence" (NEW YORK TIMES) of a midwestern Black childhood — inscribed to "To / Gene / My Buddy / and right / arm,"; likely his producer, Gene Wolsk.
Signed limited Franklin Library edition of Baldwin's first novel, his semi-autobiographical "extended rite of exorcism" (Harris).
Original poster advertising Ellison's University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign lecture on the history and development of the novel.
First printing of this anthology of works by Black Americans, from the 18th-century poetry of Phillis Wheatley to the 20th-century essays of Alain Locke and much in between.
Inscribed first printing of Brown's acclaimed first novel, edited and championed by Toni Morrison.
First printing of this story of friendship, duality, and perceptions of power and belonging – Toni Morrison's second novel.
Inscribed first edition of Morrison's sixth novel, one of her most challenging and reportedly her favorite of all her books.
First edition of the acclaimed novel about a Black man just released from prison, "the bright boy of infinite promise [...] and the very old parolee of twenty-two, who sees little difference between the prison world and the world outside."
First edition of this Harlem Renaissance classic, depicting the inter- and intra-racial conflicts of the Black community in Harlem with a dash of satire.
Inscribed first edition of the famed epic of the African diaspora, warmly presented by Haley in the year of publication.
Association publisher's review copy of this powerful novel of youth destroyed by gang violence, with extensive inscriptions from both authors to Harlem Writer's Guild president Bill Ford.
First edition of this expansive novel that recounts the experiences of a Black woman over the course of an eventful century.
First printing of the second novel by one of the most prominent members of the Harlem Renaissance, adapted into the 1937 J. Elder Wills musical film BIG FELLA starring Paul Robeson and Elisabeth Welch.
Inscribed first printing, as association copy, of this political thriller that follows a Black congressman as he becomes increasingly wrapped up in a secessionist Black nationalist group – by noted journalist and Tuskegee airman Chuck Stone.
First edition of Tillman's scarce novel, a semi-autobiographical story of heartbreak and resilience starring a Black polio survivor and wheelchair user, a sequel to the author's previous LIFE ON WHEELS.
Inscribed first edition of Whitehead's sixth novel, winner of both the National Book Award and the Pulitzer Prize.
First edition of this novel about an African American Korean War veteran's experiences of violence while trying to exercise his right to vote in the segregated South.
Scarce program of exhibits and performances from the 1973 April Black Arts Festival organized by the Black Student Union of West Chester State College.
First printing of this US epic, based on the true life story of the author's grandmother, a formerly enslaved woman who lived from the antebellum period through the Civil War and Reconstruction.