Home Feed
Home
Search
Search
Add Review, Blurb, Quote
Add
Activity
Activity
Profile
Profile
Native Son
Native Son | Richard A Wright
Right from the start, Bigger Thomas had been headed for jail. It could have been for assault or petty larceny; by chance, it was for murder and rape. Native Son tells the story of this young black man caught in a downward spiral after he kills a young white woman in a brief moment of panic. Set in Chicago in the 1930s, Wright's powerful novel is an unsparing reflection on the poverty and feelings of hopelessness experienced by people in inner cities across the country and of what it means to be black in America.
Amazon Indiebound Barnes and Noble WorldCat Goodreads LibraryThing
Pick icon
100%
blurb
Tkimsal
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

30 Book Recommendations in 30 Days — Day 8 “Native Son” by Richard Wright

review
Graywacke
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

Whoa!

A look at the human cost of racism without pity - well, that's the idea. What comes out is some insanely and uncomfortable intense tension using a Shakespeare-like villain—all calculation without consequential foresight—confined in racist space. This is followed by a lot of contemplation, some of it awkward and with an agenda. No literary work of perfection, but a powerful and uncomfortable novel.

(Richard Wright is a 2023 theme for me)

KathyWheeler Maybe that‘s how I‘ll finally read this book — make Wright my theme for a year or even a few months. 2y
Graywacke @KathyWheeler 🙂 He only has three major books. Lots of non-major stuff, though. 2y
Billypar Great review - you summed it up perfectly. I would have loved it, but I thought the ending was disappointing. 2y
Graywacke @Billypar thanks. I don‘t know that I could have loved this, but i‘m glad to have read it. As for the ending, 🤷🏻‍♂️ 2y
46 likes4 comments
blurb
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

🎧📖 Finishing off my last read for black history month. #bhm

Graywacke I‘m about halfway through. Some seriously uncomfortable tension! (edited) 2y
69 likes1 comment
blurb
Graywacke
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

I‘m glad kitty is relaxed because this book is insane and has my little brain all worked up. After stumbling through a dry introduction (by Wright), I started yesterday.

dabbe Da sweetest baby! ❣️🐾❣️ 2y
LitStephanie So cute! I have never read that. Hope you enjoy it. 2y
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego I've been listening to this and have had so much anxiety over the choices he's making. I still can't get over the main thing he did, was not expecting that in any way. 2y
See All 7 Comments
Graywacke @StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego I knew and yet i was still stunned. It just came out of nowhere! 2y
Leftcoastzen 😻 2y
Bookwomble There's a grim inevitability about the unfolding of events. I can remember reading this and thinking "No, no, no, don't do that!" An amazing book, and Wright really hooked me in, but I'm not sure I could reread it as it was emotionally exhausting. Enjoy! ? 2y
Bookwomble Also, 🐈‍⬛😻 2y
58 likes2 stack adds7 comments
review
WellReadCatLady
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

Could not put this book down.

Graywacke Ooh, cool. Richard Wright is maybe a 2023 theme for me. 3y
18 likes1 comment
review
Lcsmcat
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

My #doublespin for December, this was a tough book. I had to take frequent breaks because the subject matter is so difficult and emotionally draining. The writing is superb and it‘s an important book. I was getting Crime & Punishment vibes, as well as American Tragedy. @TheAromaofBooks

TheAromaofBooks Great review!! 4y
KCofKaysville @Lsmcat It was tough to read but it opened my eyes a little when I read it several years ago. 4y
46 likes2 comments
blurb
Lcsmcat
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Started my #doublespin book today. I don‘t think it‘s going to be any more cheerful than my #bookspin was. 😂

44 likes2 stack adds
blurb
Lcsmcat
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
OriginalCyn620 📚👍🏻📚 4y
37 likes1 comment
review
Emilymdxn
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

This was deeply uncomfortable, and absolutely breathtaking. Richard Wright put together a complex story about a complex man. I don‘t think I will ever ‘get to the bottom‘ of Bigger Thomas but I‘ll be thinking about this a very long time. As a novel that made a lot of abstract concepts about racism concrete and personal this is an incredible resource #blacklivesmatter

Tw for rape if you‘re thinking of reading it.

Leftcoastzen Wonderful edition! 5y
AmyG Richard Wright is brilliant. If you haven‘t read Black Boy, read it. 5y
Emilymdxn Thank you @Leftcoastzen ! @AmyG it‘s going to be the first thing I buy when I get my next furlough pay in two weeks ☺️ 5y
Bookwomble I found this one such a painful read, desperately hoping it wouldn't end the way it inevitably did. 🖤 5y
66 likes7 stack adds4 comments
blurb
Emilymdxn
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

It‘s got very cold and rainy here in Surrey again (I love summer rain a lot though it‘s not the best for outside exercise) so I‘m using a forced day completely in to try to read and educate myself on the #blacklivesmatter protests. Native Son is disturbing complex and difficult to read, but this edition has a very good intro about how it was received and used by the Black Panthers which makes reading it feel very worthwhile

66 likes1 stack add
blurb
Emilymdxn
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Taking a break from what I was reading as it didn‘t feel right to read a natural history of Scotland at this frightening and urgent time in history. Most of the books I bought last year to explore black writers more are trapped at my flat in London but I found this one at my parents house. From the UK it feels like there‘s not much I can do unfortunately other than post on social media and sign every petition on the planet #blacklivesmatter

69 likes4 stack adds
review
j9brown
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

Extremely powerful. Wright is an incredible writer. His reason for writing about a murderer rather than a more sympathetic character is brilliant (the book's intro is very worthwhile, sometimes I skip them but I'm glad I didn't here). Challenging and suffocating, but a really important read.
But you can't read my copy. Someone or several someones read the hell out of this before I got my hands on it. I'm always careful, but it just went to pieces!

j9brown @KatieDid927 I'll scotch tape it back together if you want to read it! 😝 5y
AmyG His book Black Boy is one of my most favorite books. I read this in high school and it had such an impact on me. 5y
j9brown @AmyG Oooh, his memoir? Stacking that for sure 😊 5y
See All 9 Comments
Leftcoastzen I read a Thomas Wolfe that I had for years, think the glue dry rotted, it fell apart in chunks , since I was traveling, I recycled it. 5y
KatieDid927 @j9brown Haha nah all good. It lived its best life. I‘ll find a copy elsewhere. Thanks tho! 5y
Graywacke Great review. I‘ll get here sometime. 5y
KatieDid927 I got a $1 copy from Book Barn! Same edition. 5y
j9brown @KatieDid927 That's where I got mine, on our Book Barn trip last year! Also just a dollar 😂 5y
KatieDid927 @j9brown Oh funny! 5y
52 likes2 stack adds9 comments
review
AshleyHoss820
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

I don‘t think there is enough space on here to say all the things I want to say. I think Wright made an excellent choice in Bigger. His crimes are brutal and inexcusable. But that‘s not the issue. Bigger‘s actions aren‘t on trial or stirring up hate/anger. His skin color is. So who‘s the real monster? A killer, willing to face his crimes/punishment, or a society seemingly content with ethnocentrism and scapegoating? 🤔🤔🤔 168/1,001 #1001Books

54 likes1 comment
review
TheFaeWays
Native Son | Richard A Wright
post image
Mehso-so

This book made a lot of really good points regarding race and class and for that it will always be an important novel in the canon, but in my opinion it drips with misogyny and I am not a fan of misogynist literature.

review
Allthingsbooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
Pickpick

This was an assigned reading....ended up being a favorite of mine. Great story.

blurb
Nute
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

#30JuneBooks - N: Bleak circumstances - utter poverty, hopelessness, despair, powerlessness, obscurity, inadequate education, disconnectedness, underserved, terrorized existence...what is the inevitable outcome of a life lived here? No one wants to know this naked truth. No one wants to see this Native Son. Richard Wright put an unapologetic slice of real life right in front of us. Unpleasant to read...Hard to swallow...the ugly truth usually is!

Bookwomble Yep, that sums up my feeling about this book - The agonisingly inevitable outcome of circumstance. You can see the tragic outcome a mile off, and I kept muttering, "No, no" under my breath as I was reading. Powerful writing which puts you through an emotional grinder. 5y
73 likes3 stack adds1 comment
quote
Cherriij
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

I didn't know I was really alive in this world until I felt things hard enough to kill for 'em...

review
twohectobooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

Mixed feelings but it‘s definitely a book I would recommend. Bigger Thomas is a young black man struggling with poverty in 1930s Chicago. He commits a brutal crime and almost gets away with it. It‘s hard to root for a murderer and rapist, but that‘s kind of the point of the book. Wright‘s prose gets so deep into his protagonist‘s experience and feelings that the book is often hard to read and I went through so many different emotions.

blurb
twohectobooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Reading through the trial in Native Son, I‘ve been wondering why Mr Boris Max isn‘t spoken of in the same breath as Atticus Finch. Looks like it may have something to do with the fact that this section of the book was quite reduced in the original and subsequent editions. I‘m reading a restored version of the text from 1991. #modernlibrarytop100

quote
twohectobooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
This post contains spoilers
show me
post image

This courtroom scene is blowing my mind in more ways than one. Bigger Thomas‘s crime is a serious one, but this also made me gasp.

#modernlibrarytop100

Texreader Yikes!! What a courtroom demonstration!! 6y
3 likes1 comment
blurb
KellyHunsakerReads
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

I waited a long time for my turn to listen to this #audiobook. So far I love it.

19 likes1 stack add
review
EmilieGR
Native Son | Richard A Wright
Pickpick

Horrifying magic

blurb
twohectobooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Just getting into my new #modernlibrarytop100 read. It‘s very long and I have a few inklings of what to expect. Already liking it more than Henderson the Rain King.

AmyG Richard Wright is so good. Black Boy is one of my most favorite booksof his. 6y
twohectobooks @AmyG I‘ve never read any of his work before! Only 40 pages in to this one but I think I‘ll end up liking it. 6y
12 likes2 comments
blurb
twohectobooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Torn between all the stuff I should be doing today and just wanting to keep reading for another hour or two.

(#catsoflitsy)

rretzler 😻 I am also, but reading (and Litsy) have won! 6y
22 likes1 comment
blurb
SW-T
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

If you haven‘t read the book or seen the movie, there are spoilers in the article.

https://www.theatlantic.com/entertainment/archive/2019/04/hbos-native-son-integr...

review
notreallyelaine
Native Son | Richard Wright
Pickpick

What stood out to me most is how little has changed in Chicago in almost a century. All the wealth is still extracted from the south + west sides and concentrated in fortified white enclaves. The city is still starkly and intentionally segregated, and those who maintain its segregation still blame their victims. Poor kids still grow up in cramped, cold, roach- and rat-infested apartments while their landlords get richer! This book made me angry.

quote
Emjoy21
Native Son | Richard Wright

“An outright lynching would be more honest than a ‘mock trial‘!”

blurb
Bookladylinda
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Took a short walk after work today. We are supposed to get a winter mix at about midday tomorrow with rain starting at 7:00am. Will probably work from home tomorrow to avoid the drama of it all. 🤦🏾‍♀️ #litsywalkers. #audiowalking

DarcysMom Glad you could get a walk in before the weather comes. 😁 6y
Kaye Great to get out while you can ! 6y
Reviewsbylola It‘s been raining here all evening and I‘m sure it will be frozen here by morning. 😑 6y
See All 8 Comments
Wife 🌹 6y
rockpools Urgh. Stay warm! 6y
Bookladylinda @Darcysmom me too, it was too cold today and I wasn‘t up to it, maybe tomorrow. 🤔 6y
61 likes8 comments
blurb
Bookladylinda
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Started this one today. Can you believe that I‘ve never read it before!?!?! Thought I should read it before the movie is released - January 24th

TiredLibrarian I remember this as being a really difficult read in some ways, but it's stayed with me through the years. Very powerful. 6y
Bookladylinda @TiredLibrarian it is definitely a hard read. 🙁 6y
JLaurenceCohen Buckle up 6y
41 likes1 stack add3 comments
blurb
JLaurenceCohen
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Yale's Beinecke Library

RaimeyGallant Beautiful. 6y
Amiable Do you live in CT? I work at the hospital in New Haven, just a few blocks from here. 6y
JLaurenceCohen @Amiable nah, in Atlanta. I was up at the Beinecke doing some research on Zora Neale Hurston. 6y
Amiable It's a beautiful library. I feel lucky to be able to visit often! 6y
tournevis Was there on a research trip once and it was sooooo great! 6y
47 likes5 comments
quote
Brotatofarm
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

“It taught me it‘s your right to hate me, Bigger. I see now that you couldn‘t do anything else but that. It was all you had.”
(Quotes are from two different characters but I found both to be powerful. Native Son is excellent, complex, and radical even today.)

review
sprainedbrain
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

I went in to this book blind and was completely blown away. The story of Bigger Thomas is powerful and unsettling. This book is about institutional racism, fear, and hate. Challenging subject matter, but a very accessible writing style. My heart hurts because while things have improved in this country since the 1930s, it‘s clear that we still have a long way to go. The last part of this book wrecked me. 😞

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

#1001books

Angitron I remember reading this a long time ago and loving it. Time for a reread! 6y
sprainedbrain @Angitron I don‘t understand how I‘ve never read it before... who was in charge of my high school and college curriculum? 😬 6y
100 likes2 stack adds2 comments
quote
toofondofbooks
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
review
hwestfall
Native Son | Richard A Wright
Pickpick

This book was so crazy. I was filled with anxiety the entire time that I read it. I didn't want to keep going but did all at the same time. It's hard to say for sure if I liked the book or not. Would I recommend it to others? Yes, but it's not a book that is enjoyable. I think the only other book I have read that I felt this way at the end was The Handmaid's Tale.

7 likes1 stack add
blurb
hwestfall
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Oh my goodness, this book! I feel so anxious as I am listening to it. All of Bigger's fear, anxiety, and anger is palpable to me. I don't want to keeping listening but do all at the same time.

blurb
Lcsmcat
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

This classic set in #Chicago has moved up on my TBR due to the #100EssentialNovels poster my sister gave me. #augustisatrip @vkois88 @Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks

StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego I have the same scratch off poster. 😊 6y
vkois88 👍👍👍 6y
59 likes2 stack adds2 comments
review
wlivengood
Native Son | Richard Wright
Pickpick

This may not sit well with some people but that‘s their problem. I am appalled by the treatment of African Americans. Our constitution states “ that we are all created equal.” Tell me why this stuff still goes on please.

CarolynM Welcome to Litsy👋🙂 6y
StillLookingForCarmenSanDiego Welcome to Litsy 👍🏻📖 6y
8 likes2 comments
blurb
LitTraveler
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

My $1.20 book haul and the newest member to my home, Winnie!

review
hayinas7
Native Son | Richard Nathaniel Wright
post image
Pickpick

Set in Chicago in the 1930‘s, Native Son by Richard Wright tells the story of Bigger Thomas, a young black man caught in a downward spiral after he kills a white woman in a brief moment of panic. I must say this book is a masterpiece! A Black man has gone into the “White Man‘s World”, committed an unspeakable crime and gets away with it. This book has many raw and disturbing moments; however, those moments cause you to think and reflect.

8 likes1 stack add
blurb
hwestfall
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Here is my #fivestack from the Salvation Army yesterday. I am pretty excited about my finds. #ReadingResolutions @Jess7

blurb
Leftcoastzen
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

#OldCoolBooks #dustjackets when you find the oldies you never know if the dust jacket will be in good shape and protected like the Cary or scuffed and dinged up like the Wright . Love them both anyway.

Linsy So true! 7y
41 likes2 stack adds1 comment
blurb
Lcsmcat
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

@RachaelusGilkinius Thanks! Wright has been on my TBR for quite awhile. Love the card!

RachaelusGilkinius @Lcsmcat, thanks for posting! He‘s a bit of a cheat since he wasn‘t born in NYC, but I am glad it inspired you. (edited) 7y
50 likes1 stack add1 comment
blurb
Rumpelakilskin
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Read Outsider and loved it. Now on to this one!

review
Mindyrecycles
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
Pickpick

Absolute masterpiece. #writtenbyapocauthor #febinbooks18

MayJasper Great cover 7y
73 likes5 stack adds1 comment
blurb
readsusieread
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image

Hour 36 challenge for the #24in48 readathon is to show the first and last books on our shelves. I like this pairing!
@24in48

Bry Nice! I shelve my books alphabetically by author‘s last name but I got a couple of those Harper Olive Editions this year and kind of want to get more and keep them all shelved together. 🤓 7y
readsusieread @Bry I organize similarly! But I keep all those Olive editions together (organized by color) because they look so nice together! 7y
39 likes2 comments
blurb
Sarah83
Native Son | Richard Wright
post image
22 likes1 stack add