DAILY PROMPT RESPONSE
Reading Richard Wright as a teenager wasn’t an assignment. It was a confrontation with a world that hadn’t changed nearly enough.
As a young Black teenager in America, most of the books I was required to read felt like carefully constructed lies. Shakespeare, Hawthorne, Fitzgerald — classics, sure, if you lived in castles or worried about existential crises between cocktails. But for me, stepping out into a world where suspicion and struggle were everyday facts, those books didn’t just miss the mark — they didn’t even see me. They didn’t explain the weight I carried, or why survival sometimes felt like a full-time job.
Then came Richard Wright’s Black Boy.
It didn’t flinch. It didn’t apologize. Wright didn’t write for comfort — he wrote to survive, and that survival came soaked in blood, hunger, and humiliation. Even though Black Boy told the story of Wright’s youth in the early 1900s Jim Crow South — an era textbooks liked to pretend was long buried — it spoke directly to my now. The signs no longer read Colored Only, but the barriers hadn’t moved much.
Wright’s rawness wasn’t a historical artifact to me. It was a living, breathing reality. The world he described — where you learned quickly how little your life was valued, where curiosity was a dangerous act of defiance — was still the world outside my window. I didn’t just understand his hunger and anger. I recognized it.
Most books on our reading lists demanded quiet admiration. Worse, most classes taught us exactly what to think about them. We weren’t reading; we were reciting. But the teacher who handed us Black Boy — he was different. He gave us room to breathe. He didn’t want us to analyze the book — he wanted us to feel it. He looked for original thought, honest reactions, even discomfort. It was the first time in a classroom I felt like my own voice mattered as much as the author’s — and with a book like Black Boy, that mattered.
Reading Black Boy wasn’t an assignment. It was a confrontation. It was survival training.
And Wright wasn’t just a lone voice howling into the void. He helped launch Ralph Ellison, who would later write Invisible Man and carve out his own complicated take on identity and erasure. Wright paved the way, kicking down the door with his bare hands; Ellison walked through and started rearranging the room.