Where the Wild Grape Grows

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"Cook" short story
"Room in Red Square" unpublished story
"Russian Correspondence" fiction
A01=Dorothy West
African American art and culture preservation
African American expatriates in Russia
African American literary history
Alberta Hunter blues singer
Alfred Mendes Trinidadian novelist
artistic mentorship networks
Augusta Savage sculptor
Author_Dorothy West
Benson-West family genealogy
Bessie Calhoun Bird poetry
Black Canadian literary history
Blanche Colton Williams Columbia professor
Caribbean contributions to Harlem Renaissance
Category=DS
Category=JBSF1
Challenge magazine contributors
Dorothy Peterson essays
Dorothy Scarborough academic mentor
Dorothy West scholarship
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Erskine Caldwell novelist
Eslanda Robeson journalism
forthcoming
Grace Walker poet
Harlem Renaissance poets and editors
Harlem Renaissance women writers
Helene Johnson poetry
Henry T. Burleigh composer
Juanita DeShields Black Canadian author
Langston Hughes unrequited romance
Lucia Mae Pitts WAC 6888th Battalion
Mae Cowdery critical reception
Marcia Prendergast verse
Marian Minus romantic partner of Dorothy West
Maud Cuney Hare Boston musicologist
Mildred Jones artist and Russian traveler
Pauli Murray early writings
propaganda film on race relations
Richmond Barthe sculptor
Russian Modernist Aleksandr Deyneka
Schlesinger Library archives
The Living Is Easy characters
The Wedding novel themes
twentieth-century Black intellectuals
underrepresented voices in literature
unpublished letters
Waring Cuney poet
women of the Harlem Renaissance

Product details

  • ISBN 9781625349538
  • Publication Date: 26 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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When Where the Wild Grape Grows was published in 2005 by the University of Massachusetts Press, it was the first book-length critical study of Dorothy West. Since then, the publication of more volumes on West and her circle testify to popular and academic interest in under-represented artists of the Harlem Renaissance, many of whom appeared first in West’s literary magazine, Challenge (1934-1937). Challenge included poems by West’s cousin Helene Johnson as well as by her friends Lucia Mae Pitts, Waring Cuney, Pauli Murray, Grace Walker, Mae Cowdery, Marcia Prendergast, and Bessie Calhoun Bird. West also published work by her romantic partner Marian Minus and by Juanita DeShields (the first Black Canadian graduate of McGill University) and the Trinidadian author Alfred Mendes. She included artwork by Mildred Jones and journalism by Eslanda Robeson and Dorothy Peterson. In addition to her editorial activities, West corresponded with important African American musicians including Maud Cuney Hare, Alberta Hunter, and Henry T. Burleigh, and with sculptors Augusta Savage and Richmond BarthÉ. Just as West mentored others, she was encouraged by such academic luminaries as Columbia Professors Blanche Colton Williams and Dorothy Scarborough, and by the controversial novelist Erskine Caldwell.

The new Introduction to Wild Grape will include fresh research on these individuals, many of whom formed part of West’s social and artistic circle. Lucia Pitts, for example, was a poet who served in the famous WAC (Women’s Army Corps) 6888th Battalion. The work of Marian Minus and Mae Cowdery has received critical attention recently and they also merit closer investigation. The Boston writer and musicologist Maud Cuney Hare was an artistic mentor to West; her cousin Waring Cuney was a close friend: both will receive more attention in the paperback edition. The artist Mildred Jones accompanied West and twenty other young African Americans to Russia in 1932 as participants in an ultimately aborted propaganda film on race relations in America; Jones studied with the important Russian Modernist painter Aleksandr Deyneka.

The original edition of Wild Grape cites two stories about West’s Russian experiences (penned under the pseudonym Mary Christopher in 1934), “Room in Red Square” and “Russian Correspondence,” but the volume does not include the actual stories. The stories are interesting because they shed light on West’s unrequited romance with Langston Hughes and her relationships with other members of the group, and they offer a unique perspective on daily life in the U.S.S.R. Both stories will be published in the new edition, along with a detailed discussion of new research about West’s visit to Russia.

A third uncollected story, “Cook” (1934), written by West under the pseudonym Jane Isaac will also be included. This story is extremely important to West’s oeuvre and her artistic development; it includes characters, themes, tropes, and plot lines that she expanded and developed in her two novels, The Living Is Easy (1948) and The Wedding (1995).

Since 2005, new material has been added to the West archive in Harvard’s Schlesinger Library. The section of Wild Grape devoted to West’s correspondence will include additional unpublished letters which underscore West’s dedication to African American art and culture.

The book includes the Benson-West family tree in Appendix II. Several scholars have expressed appreciation for this information which has not been published elsewhere; the chart will be updated to include the birth of several of West’s descendants.

Dorothy West was born in Boston in 1907 and died on Martha's Vineyard in 1998. 

Cynthia Davis is professor of English at San Jacinto College. Together, she and Dr. Mitchell have published seven books, primarily on women writers of the Harlem Renaissance. Their most recent volume is In Flaming Letters: Lucia Pitts, Poet of the Six Triple Eight. 

Verner D. Mitchell is professor of English at the University of Memphis and editor of This Waiting for Love: Helene Johnson, Poet of the Harlem Renaissance. 

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