Peter Abrahams (born March 3, 1919, Vrededorp, near Johannesburg, South Africa—died January 18, 2017, Kingston, Jamaica) was a South African-born writer who penned perceptive and powerful novels about the injustices and complexities of racial politics. His early work Mine Boy (1946) was the first to depict the dehumanizing effect of racism in South Africa on black and mixed-race people and was perhaps the first South African book written in English to win international acclaim.
Although Abrahams left South Africa in 1939 and moved to England—where he worked as an editor for The Daily Worker, a communist newspaper, and became involved in the Pan-African movement—most of his novels and short stories are based on his early life in South Africa. Mine Boy, for example, tells of a country youth thrown into the alien and oppressive culture of a large South African industrial city. The Path of Thunder (1948) depicts a young mixed-race couple under the menacing shadow of enforced segregation. Wild Conquest (1950) follows the great northern trek of the Boers, and A Night of Their Own (1965) sets forth the plight of Indians in South Africa. The novel A Wreath for Udomo (1956; new ed. 1971) describes an English-educated African who becomes the despotic ruler of his homeland. Abrahams set This Island Now (1966; new ed. 1971) in the Caribbean, and The View from Coyaba (1985) chronicles four generations of a Jamaican family and their experiences with racism. He also wrote the memoirs Tell Freedom: Memories of Africa (1954; new ed. 1970) and The Coyaba Chronicles: Reflections on the Black Experience in the 20th Century (2000).
In the mid-1950s Abrahams was commissioned to write a history of Jamaica (Jamaica: An Island Mosaic [1957]), and soon after he moved his family to the island. There he became editor of the West Indian Economist and worked for Radio Jamaica, until 1964, when he gave up most of his duties so that he could devote himself full-time to writing. Many of his earlier works were reissued or translated into other languages in the 1960s and early ’70s, as his reading public steadily widened.