Leon Forrest

American writer
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Quick Facts
Born:
Jan. 8, 1937, Chicago, Ill., U.S.
Died:
Nov. 6, 1997, Evanston, Ill.

Leon Forrest (born Jan. 8, 1937, Chicago, Ill., U.S.—died Nov. 6, 1997, Evanston, Ill.) was an African-American author of large, inventive novels that fuse myth, history, legend, and contemporary realism.

Forrest attended the University of Chicago and served in the U.S. Army before beginning his career as a writer. From 1965 to 1973 Forrest worked as a journalist for various papers, including the Nation of Islam’s weekly Muhammed Speaks. He also published excerpts from his first novel, There Iis a Tree More Ancient than Eden, which was issued in book form in 1973, the year he began teaching English and African-American studies at Northwestern University.

Forrest’s works were influenced by those of William Faulkner and Ralph Ellison. There Is a Tree portrays the tangled relationships between the illegitimate offspring of a onetime slave-owning family; several of the book’s distinctive characters reappear in subsequent Forrest novels. Echoes of Greek and Latin mythology are present in The Bloodworth Orphans (1977), about the search by three orphaned siblings for roots and understanding amid turmoil. In Two Wings to Veil My Face (1983) an ex-slave tells her life story to her great-grandson, in the process changing his life. Forrest’s ambitious novel, Divine Days (1992), was set in Chicago in 1966 and concerns the efforts of an African-American playwright to investigate the disappearance of a fellow black. A book of collected essays, Relocations of the Spirit, was published in 1994.

Zora Neale Hurston (1891-1960) portrait by Carl Van Vecht April 3, 1938. Writer, folklorist and anthropologist celebrated African American culture of the rural South.
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This article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.