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Other editions of book Cane

  • Cane: A Novel

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (Wilder Publications, July 9, 2018)
    Cane' explores spiritual and emotional frustration, failure of basic communication between individuals, and repression of natural energies. It reveals the chaos of contemporary black American life and calls for a spiritual awakening. A land mark novel that changed the way America looked at black writers.I love it passionately; could not possibly exist without it. β€” Alice WalkerThis book should be on all readers' and writers' desks and in their minds. β€” Maya Angelou[Toomer avoided] the pitfalls of propaganda and moralizing on the one hand and the snares of a false and hollow race pride on the other hand. β€” Montgomery Gregory
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    (Harper & Row, Jan. 1, 1969)
    None
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (, July 31, 2020)
    Cane is a 1923 novel by noted Harlem Renaissance author Jean Toomer. The novel is structured as a series of vignettes revolving around the origins and experiences of African Americans in the United States. The vignettes alternate in structure between narrative prose, poetry, and play-like passages of dialogue. As a result, the novel has been classified as a composite novel or as a short story cycle. Though some characters and situations recur between vignettes, the vignettes are mostly freestanding, tied to the other vignettes thematically and contextually more than through specific plot details.
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (, June 7, 2020)
    Cane is a 1923 novel by noted Harlem Renaissance author Jean Toomer. The novel is structured as a series of vignettes revolving around the origins and experiences of African Americans in the United States. The vignettes alternate in structure between narrative prose, poetry, and play-like passages of dialogue. As a result, the novel has been classified as a composite novel or as a short story cycle. Though some characters and situations recur between vignettes, the vignettes are mostly freestanding, tied to the other vignettes thematically and contextually more than through specific plot details.
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (Dover Publications, Jan. 16, 2019)
    "[Cane] has been reverberating in me to an astonishing degree. I love it passionately; could not possibly exit without it." β€” Alice Walker "A breakthrough in prose and poetical writing …. This book should be on all readers' and writers' desks and in their minds." β€” Maya Angelou Hailed by critics for its literary experimentation and vivid portrayal of African-American characters and culture, Cane represents one of the earliest expressions of the Harlem Renaissance. Combining poetry, drama, and storytelling, it contrasts life in an African-American community in the rural South with that of the urban North. Author Jean Toomer (1894–1967) drew upon his experiences as a teacher in rural Georgia to create a variety of Southern psychological realism that ranks alongside the best works of William Faulkner. The book's three-part structure, ranging from South to North and back again, is united by its focus on the lives of African-American men and women in a world of bigotry, violence, passion, and tenderness.
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    (Modern Library, June 28, 1994)
    Poems, sketches, and stories portray the lives of Blacks in the rural South and the urban North
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (Jazzybee Verlag, Jan. 9, 2019)
    'Cane' is a novel and possibly the best-known work by Jean Toomer. The novel is built up in a series of vignettes that deal with the origins and experiences of African Americans in the United States. The vignettes picture the South in sketches, short stories and poems by. A book whose tap roots run deep in the Southern soil, and whose music sways our emotions as only primitive desires can.
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer and Darwin T. Turner

    (W. W. Norton & Company, Jan. 1, 1987)
    GOOD copy, mild shelfwear w/small crease. Title page corner-clipped where previous owner's name may have been. Important title emerging from the Harlem Renaissance of the 1920's. Includes critical commentaries from that era & the present. Best price! Will mail out within 12 hrs. of payment confirmation.
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (Start Publishing LLC, April 14, 2020)
    Cane' explores spiritual and emotional frustration, failure of basic communication between individuals, and repression of natural energies. It reveals the chaos of contemporary black American life and calls for a spiritual awakening. A land mark novel that changed the way America looked at black writers. I love it passionately; could not possibly exist without it. β€” Alice Walker This book should be on all readers' and writers' desks and in their minds. β€” Maya Angelou [Toomer avoided] the pitfalls of propaganda and moralizing on the one hand and the snares of a false and hollow race pride on the other hand. β€” Montgomery Gregory
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (, Aug. 15, 2019)
    Cane is a 1923 novel by noted Harlem Renaissance author Jean Toomer. The novel is structured as a series of vignettes revolving around the origins and experiences of African Americans in the United States. The vignettes alternate in structure between narrative prose, poetry, and play-like passages of dialogue. As a result, the novel has been classified as a composite novel or as a short story cycle. Though some characters and situations recur between vignettes, the vignettes are mostly freestanding, tied to the other vignettes thematically and contextually more than through specific plot details.About the author- Jean Toomer (born Nathan Pinchback Toomer, December 26, 1894 – March 30, 1967) was an African-American poet and novelist commonly associated with the Harlem Renaissance, though he actively resisted the association, and modernism. His reputation stems from his only book, the novel Cane (1923), which Toomer wrote during and after a stint as a school principal at a black school in rural Sparta, Georgia. The novel intertwines the stories of six women and includes an apparently autobiographical thread; sociologist Charles S. Johnson called it "the most astonishingly brilliant beginning of any Negro writer of his generation". He resisted being classified as a Negro writer, saying that he was American.Toomer continued to write poetry, short stories and essays. His first wife died soon after the birth of their daughter. After he married again in 1934, Toomer moved with his family from New York to Doylestown, Pennsylvania. There he became a member of the Religious Society of Friends (also known as Quakers) and retired from public life. His papers are held by the Beinecke Rare Book Library at Yale University.
  • Cane: A Novel

    Jean Toomer

    eBook (Dancing Unicorn Books, March 4, 2019)
    Cane' explores spiritual and emotional frustration, failure of basic communication between individuals, and repression of natural energies. It reveals the chaos of contemporary black American life and calls for a spiritual awakening. A land mark novel that changed the way America looked at black writers.I love it passionately; could not possibly exist without it. β€” Alice WalkerThis book should be on all readers' and writers' desks and in their minds. β€” Maya Angelou[Toomer avoided] the pitfalls of propaganda and moralizing on the one hand and the snares of a false and hollow race pride on the other hand. β€” Montgomery Gregory
  • Cane

    Jean Toomer, Ron Butler

    (Brilliance Audio, Dec. 3, 2019)
    A striking mosaic of prose, poetry, and dramatic dialogue, Jean Toomer’s Cane has come to be considered a masterpiece of the Harlem Renaissance. Structured as a series of vignettes ripe with longing, passion, violence, and revenge, the haunting novel gives a powerful voice to the interior lives of African Americans in the rural South and urban North.Championed for its unsparing honesty and psychological insight by such luminaries as Langston Hughes, Richard Wright, Alice Walker, and Maya Angelou, Cane shines as a beacon to generations of African American writers who followed.Revised edition: Previously published as Cane, this edition of Cane (AmazonClassics Edition) includes editorial revisions.