Walking in the dark

James Baldwin, my father, and me

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Douglas Field
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Blending literary criticism with memoir and biography, Walking in the Dark: James Baldwin, My Father, and Me explores the author’s longstanding fascination with the American author James Baldwin, who died in 1987. Recounting various trips abroad where Douglas Field has searched for fragments of Baldwin’s work in archives, as well as following in that writer’s footsteps in France, Switzerland and the US, Walking in the Dark is a reflection on the hold writers have over us, as well as a deeply personal account of Douglas Field coming to terms with his father’s Alzheimer’s disease. Reflecting on his father, who witnessed Baldwin debating with the conservative maverick William F. Buckley Jr. at the University of Cambridge in 1965, Walking in the Dark uses Richard Field’s illness as a prism through which to consider key themes in Baldwin’s work, including illness, place, fathers, memory and mistakes. In the last decade, and certainly since the inception of the Black Lives Matter movement a decade ago, Baldwin’s life and work have gripped the imagination of readers across the globe. Walking in the Dark explores the author’s fascination with the writer long before his current renaissance, but also reflects on the current fascination with Baldwin during the centennial of his birth.

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