"Chakkalakal asks the reader to see the 'First Negro Novelist' as he saw himself: a writer and student of American letters at a time when the literary marketplace struggled to take him seriously...a timely reminder of the influence of artists like Charles W. Chesnutt today, when perhaps only literature has the power to sustain us." - The New York Times Book Review
"Excellent ... An overdue celebration of an unjustly forgotten author, this enthralls." -
Publisher's Weekly "The first full-length biography of African American writer Charles Chesnutt, Tess Chakkalakal's
A Matter of Complexion is an immersive account of the life and thought of one the post-Civil war era's most fascinating public intellectuals. If you've read Chesnutt, you'll want to read this book, and if you have not read Chesnutt. you'll want to, after reading this book." - Mia E. Bay, Paul A. Mellon Professor of American History at the University of Cambridge and author of
Traveling Black "Charles W. Chesnutt was the most innovative and socially committed African American writer of fiction between Reconstruction and World War I. Tess Chakkalakal's outstanding biography provides the most complete and insightful portrait we have of this fascinating artist and prophetic public intellectual." - William L. Andrews, The University of North Carolina, Author of
Slavery and Class in the American South "In
A Matter of Complexion, Tess Chakkalakal celebrates a boundary-breaking writer who deserves to be far better known, and gives us a compelling history of America's cultural, business, and political life. An important contribution to our understanding of race, art, and citizenship." - Tracy Daugherty, author of
Larry McMurtry: A Life