Lot of 4 Post- Bellum Black Americana Books...All God\'s Chillun\'


Lot of 4 Post- Bellum Black Americana Books...All God\'s Chillun\'

When you click on links to various merchants on this site and make a purchase, this can result in this site earning a commission. Affiliate programs and affiliations include, but are not limited to, the eBay Partner Network.


Buy Now

Lot of 4 Post- Bellum Black Americana Books...All God\'s Chillun\':
$5.99


This sale is for a lot of 4 Black Americana:

  • \"Mammy\'s White Folks\" by Emma Speed Sampson...Published by Grosset & Dunlap; New York; 1920; 4th printing; 336 pages; frontispiece of young white girl in black woman\'s lap with caption, \"tell me something more about my mother, mammy\"; missing dust jacket; light staining to front board; corners bumped; some scribbling in pencil to front end page; text is clean; binding is tight.
  • \"The Shorn Lamb\"...by Emma Speed Sampson...Published by The Reilly & Lee Co.; Chicago; 1922; 1st edition (?); 331 pages; missing dust jacket; some minor wear to outer hinges; corners bumped; light shelf wear and light scuffing to boards; text is clean; binding is tight.
  • \"All God\'s Chillun Got Wings and Welded\" by Eugene O\'Neill. Arguably one of his most controversial of plays, it starred Paul Robesonin the premiere, in which he portrayed the black husband of an abusive white woman, who resenting her husband\'s skin color, destroys his promising career as a lawyer. As the last play of O’Neill that casts a black lead, All God’s Chillun Got Wings discussed the intraracial and interracial issues that plagued American society in the early twentieth century. O’Neill gave glimpses of the struggle of being black in the time period and what the implications of being in a relationship with someone of the opposite race would entail. [Wikepedia]. Published by Boni & Liveright; New York; 1924; 1st edition; 170 pages; no dust jacket; good condition in brown cloth; pulling to top spine; corners lightly bumped; some pencil scribbling to front paste down with previous owner\'s signature to front end page; untrimmed page edges; text is clean; binding is tight.
  • \"God\'s Stepchildren\" by Sarah Gertrude Millin. Sarah Gertrude Millin,died July 6, 1968 in Johannesburg, South Africa. She was a South African writer whose novels deal with the problems of South African life. This particular noveldealswith the problems of four generations of a half-black, half-white (“Coloured”) family in South Africa—that established her reputation. Published by Boni & Liveright; New York; 1924; 6th printing; 319 pages; no dust jacket; good condition in black cloth; some scuffing to boards; corners bumped; previous owner\'s signature to front paste down; pages untrimmed; text is clean; binding it tight.

PAYMENT: I accept PAYPAL PAYMENTS ONLY. Visa, MasterCard, and Discover also accepted through Paypal. Full payment expected within 7 days upon closed of sale.

SHIPPING: I generally ship using USPS Media mail. Free shipping limited to U.S. residents only.

GOOD LUCK AND HAPPY offerDING...


Lot of 4 Post- Bellum Black Americana Books...All God\'s Chillun\':
$5.99

Buy Now