The Blacker the Berry . . . by Allyson Hobbs & Wallace Thurman
Author:Allyson Hobbs & Wallace Thurman
Language: eng
Format: epub
Publisher: Penguin Publishing Group
Published: 2018-01-16T00:00:00+00:00
PART 4
RENT PARTY
Saturday evening. Alva had urged her to hurry uptown from work. He was going to take her on a party with some friends of his. This was the first time he had ever asked her to go to any sort of social affair with him. She had never met any of his friends save Braxton, who scarcely spoke to her, and never before had Alva suggested taking her to any sort of social gathering either public or semi-public. He often took her to various motion picture theaters, both downtown and in Harlem, and at least three nights a week he would call for her at the theater and escort her to Harlem. On these occasions they often went to Chinese restaurants or to ice cream parlors before going home. But usually they would go to City College Park, find an empty bench in a dark corner where they could sit and spoon before retiring either to her room or to Alva’s.
Emma Lou had, long before this, suggested going to a dance or to a party, but Alva had always countered that he never attended such affairs during the summer months, that he stayed away from them for precisely the same reason that he stayed away from work, namely, because it was too hot. Dancing, said he, was a matter of calisthenics, and calisthenics were work. Therefore it, like any sort of physical exercise, was taboo during hot weather.
Alva sensed that sooner or later Emma Lou would become aware of his real reason for not taking her out among his friends. He realized that one as color-conscious as she appeared to be would, at some not so distant date, jump to what for him would be uncomfortable conclusions. He did not wish to risk losing her before the end of summer, but neither could he risk taking her out among his friends, for he knew too well that he would be derided for his unseemly preference for “dark meat,” and told publicly without regard for her feelings, that “black cats must go.”
Furthermore he always took Geraldine to parties and dances. Geraldine with her olive-colored skin and straight black hair. Geraldine, who of all the people he pretended to love, really inspired him emotionally as well as physically, the one person he conquested without thought of monetary gain. Yet he had to do something with Emma Lou, and release from the quandary presented itself from most unexpected quarters.
Quite accidentally, as things of the sort happen in Harlem with its complex but interdependable social structure, he had become acquainted with a young Negro writer, who had asked him to escort a group of young writers and artists to a house-rent party. Though they had heard much of this phenomenon, none had been on the inside of one, and because of their rather polished manners and exteriors, were afraid that they might not be admitted. Proletarian Negroes are as suspicious of their more sophisticated brethren as they are of white men, and resent as keenly their intrusions into their social world.
Download
This site does not store any files on its server. We only index and link to content provided by other sites. Please contact the content providers to delete copyright contents if any and email us, we'll remove relevant links or contents immediately.
Beautiful Disaster by McGuire Jamie(25254)
Trainspotting by Irvine Welsh(21520)
Call Me by Your Name by André Aciman(20375)
The Secret History by Donna Tartt(18851)
All the Missing Girls by Megan Miranda(15584)
Cat's cradle by Kurt Vonnegut(15189)
Pimp by Iceberg Slim(14397)
Norse Mythology by Gaiman Neil(13211)
The Tidewater Tales by John Barth(12609)
4 3 2 1: A Novel by Paul Auster(12288)
Scorched Eggs by Childs Laura(11314)
The Break by Marian Keyes(9308)
Adultolescence by Gabbie Hanna(8858)
The remains of the day by Kazuo Ishiguro(8828)
Never let me go by Kazuo Ishiguro(8714)
Where the Crawdads Sing by Delia Owens(8518)
All the Light We Cannot See: A Novel by Anthony Doerr(8435)
A Man Called Ove: A Novel by Fredrik Backman(8372)
Circe by Madeline Miller(8020)