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Decoding The History Of Black Mysteries
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Decoding The History Of Black Mysteries
Spooks, Spies, And Private Eyes
By Paula L. Woods, written for The New Crisis magazine, September/October 2001.

When then-President Bill Clinton cited Waiter Mosley as one of his favorite mystery writers, many believed Mosley to be the first African American to find success in the genre, unaware that Chester Himes had preceded Mosley by several decades. But misperceptions like this are not uncommon, because there are as many plot twists and surprises in the history of African Americans writing mystery, crime, and suspense fiction as there are in the genre itself.

The earliest mystery fiction by African American writers appeared not in book form, but in "colored" periodicals and newspapers. Among those pioneering writers were journalists Pauline Hopkins (whose short stories, "The Mystery Within Us" and "Talma Gordon," appeared in 1900 issues of the Colored American Magazine) and John E. Bruce (whose "The Black Sleuth" was serialized in the 1907-1908 McGirt's Reader). And while Hopkins' 1900 novel Hagar's Daughter contains mystery elements, it was Jamaican writer W. Adolphe Roberts who was the first Black to publish a mystery novel, The Haunting Hand, in 1926. Yet Roberts' effort wasn't recognized for almost three quarters of a century, perhaps because his characters were not Black.

The absence of Black characters was not unusual for mysteries of the 1920s. Called "Golden Age" mysteries, these novels were notable for the ways in which they distorted the lives of people of color.

"When we read a classic mystery of the 1920s and the people with dark skins and accents...are all servants or villains, then this tells us something important about America in the 1920s," asserts Frankie Y. Bailey, an associate professor in the School of Criminal Justice at New York's University of Albany, who uses mystery fiction to teach students about crime and mass media.

Given this distortion of Black life, the appearance of Rudolph Fisher's 1932 The Conjure-Man Dies, the first mystery novel by an African American to feature Black characters, cannot be overlooked.

Fisher, an erudite physician, novelist, and personality of the Harlem Renaissance, was probably the last person one would expect to write mystery fiction, and he was certainly out of step with other African American literary figures of his time. Yet Fisher drew on his background and broad knowledge of Harlem society in crafting his groundbreaking mystery, which featured a physician sleuth, Dr. John Archer, and Perry Dart, an NYPD detective, as his putative sidekick. Their investigation of the death of an African psychic and king, Dr. Frimbo, placed Archer and Dart in the midst of Harlem locales and residents of all social strata as they unraveled the perplexing crime.

Fisher was not the only Harlem Renaissance figure to write in the mystery genre or the sub-genre of political thrillers.

Journalist, critic and novelist George Schuyler, perhaps best known for his satirical novel Black No More, wrote numerous mystery short stories for the Pittsburgh Courier under his own name and several pseudonyms, and published two political thrillers in the 1930s. During the same period, Alice Dunbar Nelson, the widow of famed poet Paul Laurence Dunbar, experimented with mystery short stories that appeared in African American periodicals. Most of these stories, however, were firmly entrenched in the Black middle class, as were their authors.

Chester Himes would break that mold. A college student whose life went awry, Himes spent almost six years in the Ohio State Penitentiary for armed robbery. There, he began to write short fiction, mostly crime stories that appeared mainly in African American periodicals, though a couple were published in Esquire magazine. After his release from prison in 1936, Himes wrote more fiction and reported on current events for periodicals, including The Crisis as did Ann Petry, best known for her classic novel of inner-city realism, The Street (1946).

In the 1940s and 1950s, Petry, Himes and Richard Wright were in the vanguard of young writers whose work departed from the uplifting moral tales of their predecessors to embrace an edgy, naturalistic style.  While not technically mysteries, Petry's novel, Himes' early novels like The Primitive (1955) and Wright's Native Son (1940) blazed a trail that later generations of mystery and crime writers of all races would follow.

Himes, after four largely unsuccessful novels, found his greatest success as an expatriate in Paris, writing what were then considered "lowly" mystery novels. The publication in 1957 of La Reine des pommes (also known as For Love of Imabelle and A Rage in Harlem in the United States) gave Himes literary freedom he had not before experienced.

James Sallis, author of a recent biography on Himes, explains: "What Chester found in the mysteries was an engine by which he could in principle examine anything—the post-War urban environment, racism, poverty, social inversion. In exploring the possibilities, he created a new kind of tale, part folktale, part dirty dozens, all improvisation. The kinetics of any one of those novels is like nothing seen before. They move. Almost every sentence is a two-edged blade, laughter and horror cutting the reader asunder."

For Richard Yarborough, who teaches graduate courses in mystery fiction at UCLA's Center for Afro-American Studies, this duality reflects African Americans' uneasy relationship with the law, which he notes is "fraught with conflict. Sometimes Grave Digger Jones and Coffin Ed Johnson (Himes' NYPD detective heroes) are so hostile you forget they're cops."

Himes would receive recognition and acclaim for his nine Harlem novels in France and, belatedly, in the United States, and inspire generations of writers from African American novelists Ishmael Reed, John Ridley and Gary Hardwick to white writers like Himes biographer Sallis, whose Lew Griffin detective series features a Black sleuth.

While Himes is a powerful influence for many, inspiration for the more than 40 African American mystery writers active today comes from a variety of sources.

For Gar Anthony Haywood, whose eight published mysteries include six featuring South Central Los Angeles private investigator Aaron Gunner, that inspiration was science fiction. "From the age of 13, I grew up writing science fiction short stories," he says. "But I was also reading classic crime and mystery fiction as well – Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, Raymond Chandler, Ross Macdonald.

For Gary Phillips, who has written four mysteries featuring Los Angeles P.I. Ivan Monk and a second series of crime novels featuring Las Vegas showgirl Martha Chainey (including Shooter's Point, forthcoming in October), the inspirations are Wright, Macdonald, Ralph Ellison, comic book writers Stan Lee and Jack Kirby — and the Bible.

"Is not the Bible a collection of stories of redemption, triumph, tragedy, chicanery, lust and greed?" he asks. "Are these not the elements of crime and mystery stories?"

Biblical allusions aside, contemporary African American mystery writers offer readers something more than just entertainment, which critics acknowledge stems from Black people's unique perspective on the world.

"Any diaspora people, by being embattled, is going to be tuned into what people don't say," suggests Lev Raphael, book critic for National Public Radio's The Todd Mundt Show and mystery columnist for the Detroit Free Press. "So Black crime novelists give us an extra layer of social understanding that makes the crime novel's search for truth that much more resonant."

That resonance is clear in mysteries that address such important subjects as communism (Mosley's A Red Death, 1992) solving murders committed during the civil rights era (Phillips' Only the Wicked, 2001), the Million Man March (Haywood's When Last Seen Alive, 1999), color and class consciousness (Valerie Wilson Wesley's The Devil Riding, 2000), and elder abuse (Eleanor Taylor Bland's Scream in Silence, 2000).

Bland, who lives in Waukegan, Ill., and whose nine Marti MacAlister mysteries are set in the parallel universe of Lincoln Prairie, is the most prolific among African American female mystery writers. The topics she addresses—racism, alcoholism, elder issues, physical and sexual abuse of children, and homelessness — echo the serious subject matter explored by Petry and non-genre writers of the past.

Given the gravity of her concerns, Bland faced some special challenges in creating her homicide detective protagonist. "I wanted a strong, Black woman who plays it by the book with integrity, morals and values. A woman who raised a family, did a job, was tough, compassionate, and caring. A woman in a "man's" job who remains a woman, and "hangs out with the boys" without compromising who she is."

Strong "sister sleuths" abound in mystery fiction written by contemporary African American women.

In addition to Bland's no-nonsense MacAlister, there are, to name only a few: the "eggplant black" full-bodied, feminist maid, ironically named Blanche White, in Barbara Neely's award-winning mysteries; Washington D.C, cop Leigh Ann Warren in Chassie West's Anthony-nominated (a mystery writing award given out by Bouchercon, the oldest and largest convention of mystery readers) series; lawyer Carole Ann Gibson in Penny Mickelbury's series set in Washington, D.C., California, and the Caribbean; and former Essence magazine editor Valerie Wilson Wesley's Tamara Hayle, a Newark, N.J., P.I and protagonist of six mysteries.

While African American female mystery writers address social concerns like their male counterparts, their novels also contain strong family dynamics that make them even more compelling.

"I write novels that examine the inner workings of families — how they can provide a person with great strength or cripple her," says Wesley.

"Tamara's family provides both for her. She has an abusive mother, but also a loving, generous grandmother. She has a son she adores, yet a brother who committed suicide. I try to make my novels examine all these issues."

The interest in families has led some writers to craft mysteries specifically for young readers.

Patricia E. Canterbury's latest, The Secret of St. Gabriel's Tower, is the first in a planned three-book series and is written for ages 9-14 and Evelyn Coleman, who has written a political thriller for adults (What A Woman's Gotta Do, 1998) has written two historical mysteries for young readers published by Pleasant Company/American Girl, Mystery of the Dark Tower (2000) and Circle of Fire (2001).

Once hooked readers will find a wealth of subject matter, locales and philosophies in crime fiction written by African Americans. There are political thrillers and satires, legal thrillers and cozies (usually featuring female amateur protagonists), medical thrillers and Ivy League mysteries, mysteries set in Sacramento and Harlem, Seattle and Paris, even a mystery that takes place at a national convention of Black journalists (Plain Brown Wrapper by Karen Grigsby Bates).

One thing is certain — mystery fiction by African American writers is, as Richard Yarborough says, "as diverse as the Black Community itself."
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Web site last updated March 20, 2003. Web site managed and designed by VCS.
Contents of this site Copyright © 2001, 2003 by Paula L. Woods.