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"Room in Red Square" unpublished story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
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eq_biography-true-stories
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
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unpublished letters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 9781625347053
  • Weight: 513g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: University of Massachusetts Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
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The first book-length study of Dorothy West, now with new writings and insights

Originally published in 2005, WheretheWildGrapeGrows:SelectedWritings, 1930–1950 was the first book-length study of Dorothy West's work, providing a rich and insightful profile of one of the last surviving members of the Harlem Renaissance. 

Although West (1907–1998) is often remembered for her novels of Boston's African American community and her lifelong ties to Martha's Vineyard, her career was also shaped by her formative years in New York, where she moved among the era's most influential writers, artists, and political figures, including Langston Hughes, Zora Neale Hurston, Richard Wright, and many others. Cynthia Davis and Verner D. Mitchell document these early decades with care, recovering out-of-print, little-known, and unpublished works, alongside evocative family photographs, to illuminate West's distinctive voice and vision. 

This expanded second edition includes three important pieces not featured in the first edition: West's story "Cook," which foreshadows tropes of racial and gendered double consciousness and geographic mobility later developed in her novels; and her two Russian texts, "Room in Red Square" and "Russian Correspondence." This new edition situates West's writings within the larger history of African American artists' fascination with and ambivalence toward the U.S.S.R. The editors also extend their analysis beyond West's early life to consider her final three decades, a period of renewed creativity and recognition. 

With a revised, enhanced introduction and a richer selection of West's writings, this updated second edition is an indispensable resource for understanding the full scope of Dorothy West's life, art, and enduring legacy. 

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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