Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Henry Roth

View through CrossRef
Henry Roth (b. 1906–d. 1995) was an American novelist and short-story writer whose autobiographically based fiction helped define immigrant fiction and American Jewish literature. Born in Tysmenitz, Galicia, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, he resettled in the United States with his family in 1908. They at first lived in Brooklyn before moving to the Lower East Side of Manhattan. In 1914 they moved uptown to Harlem, where Roth attended City College of New York. While still an undergraduate, he was befriended by and moved in with Eda Lou Walton, a poet and an instructor at New York University. With her support, he wrote Call It Sleep, a powerful account of life on the Lower East Side as experienced by a little immigrant Jewish boy. The novel was published in 1934, to critical acclaim but few sales. By the early 1940s, disillusioned with the New York literary scene, he moved with his new wife, the musician Muriel Parker, whom he had met at the artists’ colony Yaddo, to Maine, where he made a subsistence living raising and slaughtering waterfowl. Call It Sleep had meanwhile fallen out of print and public awareness until a paperback edition was published in 1964 and hailed as a neglected masterpiece. Suddenly a bestselling author, Roth, who had written only a few short stories and essays—later collected in Shifting Landscape: A Composite (1987)—during the interim, slowly returned to writing. However, it was only after moving to New Mexico and the death of his beloved wife that Roth felt free to pour forth in fiction drawn closely from his own life. During his final decade, often in pain and longing for death, the octogenarian tapped out thousands of manuscript pages from which his assistant, Felicia Steele, and his editor, Robert Weil, carved out a tetralogy filled with painful personal revelations. In 1994, sixty years after his first novel, Call It Sleep, Roth was back in print with his second, the first volume of a series that took the title Mercy of a Rude Stream. The tetralogy consisted of A Star Shines over Mt. Morris Park (1994), A Diving Rock on the Hudson (1995), From Bondage (1996), and Requiem for Harlem (1998). The last two of the four volumes were published posthumously, as was an additional novel—excavated from the final manuscripts—titled An American Type (2010).
Oxford University Press
Title: Henry Roth
Description:
Henry Roth (b.
1906–d.
1995) was an American novelist and short-story writer whose autobiographically based fiction helped define immigrant fiction and American Jewish literature.
Born in Tysmenitz, Galicia, then part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, he resettled in the United States with his family in 1908.
They at first lived in Brooklyn before moving to the Lower East Side of Manhattan.
In 1914 they moved uptown to Harlem, where Roth attended City College of New York.
While still an undergraduate, he was befriended by and moved in with Eda Lou Walton, a poet and an instructor at New York University.
With her support, he wrote Call It Sleep, a powerful account of life on the Lower East Side as experienced by a little immigrant Jewish boy.
The novel was published in 1934, to critical acclaim but few sales.
By the early 1940s, disillusioned with the New York literary scene, he moved with his new wife, the musician Muriel Parker, whom he had met at the artists’ colony Yaddo, to Maine, where he made a subsistence living raising and slaughtering waterfowl.
Call It Sleep had meanwhile fallen out of print and public awareness until a paperback edition was published in 1964 and hailed as a neglected masterpiece.
Suddenly a bestselling author, Roth, who had written only a few short stories and essays—later collected in Shifting Landscape: A Composite (1987)—during the interim, slowly returned to writing.
However, it was only after moving to New Mexico and the death of his beloved wife that Roth felt free to pour forth in fiction drawn closely from his own life.
During his final decade, often in pain and longing for death, the octogenarian tapped out thousands of manuscript pages from which his assistant, Felicia Steele, and his editor, Robert Weil, carved out a tetralogy filled with painful personal revelations.
In 1994, sixty years after his first novel, Call It Sleep, Roth was back in print with his second, the first volume of a series that took the title Mercy of a Rude Stream.
The tetralogy consisted of A Star Shines over Mt.
Morris Park (1994), A Diving Rock on the Hudson (1995), From Bondage (1996), and Requiem for Harlem (1998).
The last two of the four volumes were published posthumously, as was an additional novel—excavated from the final manuscripts—titled An American Type (2010).

Related Results

Responsible Mischief: Roth as Reader
Responsible Mischief: Roth as Reader
Abstract: Roth, as we know, had many identities, but he was always a reader. This paper explores how literature helped him forge an identity, starting in adolescence, his book-beso...
Henry Lives! Learning from Lawson Fandom
Henry Lives! Learning from Lawson Fandom
Since his death in 1922, Henry Lawson’s “spirit” has been kept alive by admirers across Australia. Over the last century, Lawson’s reputation in the academy has fluctuated yet fan ...
The Odd Couple: Strindberg and Roth
The Odd Couple: Strindberg and Roth
Abstract: At first glance, it would seem that Philip Roth and August Strindberg, Swedish dramatist, novelist, social critic, and iconoclast, share little. However, a careful compar...
"Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan": Democratic Theory, Populism, and Philip Roth's "American Trilogy"
"Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan": Democratic Theory, Populism, and Philip Roth's "American Trilogy"
Populism, as both ideology and social movement, is nearly a universal, albeit sporadic, feature of all modern democratic political systems. Populism is also arguably the only examp...
Roth after Eighty
Roth after Eighty
Philip Roth scholars continue to reflect on what Philip Roth’s retirement in 2012 means for the landscape of American literature and what his professed disappearance from the publi...
Winner of the Siegel/McDaniel Award 2024: Parables of Modern Belief in Philip Roth and Graham Greene
Winner of the Siegel/McDaniel Award 2024: Parables of Modern Belief in Philip Roth and Graham Greene
Abstract: This article makes a novel comparison between Philip Roth and Graham Greene, identifying instructive parallels between Roth’s short story “Eli the Fanatic” (1959) and Gre...
Celebrity Roth and the Politics of Privacy
Celebrity Roth and the Politics of Privacy
Abstract: Celebrity, fame, reputation, renown—all of these terms apply to Philip Roth, the award-winning novelist who sought and rejected attention. The nature of Roth’s relationsh...
Soliloquy of Samuel Roth: A Paranormal Defense
Soliloquy of Samuel Roth: A Paranormal Defense
An act of critical ventriloquism, this piece channels the spirit of Samuel Roth, the publisher who brought out serialized and bound editions of Ulysses in America during the late 1...

Back to Top