The House Behind the Cedars
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About The Book

The House Behind the Cedars is the first published novel by American author Charles W. Chesnutt which tells the story of two young African Americans who decide to pass for white in order to claim their share of the American dream.John and Rena Walden are African Americans of mixed-race ancestry. Having changed his last name to Warwick and married a white southerner John works as a prominent attorney in Clarence South Carolina as a white man. Following his wifes death John returns to Patesville hoping to convince his mother Miss Molly to allow his younger sister to return with him and care for his infant son. Allowed to accompany her brother Rena — under the name Rowena Warwick — seamlessly enters the white social sphere and is soon engaged to the dashing young aristocrat George Tryon. However when the truth of her Renas racial identity is revealed accidentally Tryon rejects his betrothed and she falls gravely ill. Rena recovers and goes on to work toward uplifting her race. Nevertheless Renas life ends tragically.. Perhaps the most influential African American writer of fiction at the turn of the twentieth century Charles Waddell Chesnutt was born June 20 1858 to Andrew Jackson Chesnutt and Anna Maria Sampson free African Americans living in Cleveland Ohio. He moved with his family to Fayetteville North Carolina in 1866. He first worked as a schoolteacher in Charlotte and Fayetteville but having grown frustrated by the limited opportunities he encountered as a mixed-race individual living in the South he moved permanenly to Cleveland in the early 1880s. Chesnutt later opened a successful stenography business in Cleveland having passed the Ohio bar exam in 1887. Eager to focus on his writing full time Chesnutt closed his stenography firm in late September 1899; however lagging book sales forced him to reopen the business in 1901.. Chesnutt published the bulk of his writing between 1899 and 1905 including his five book-length works of fiction: two collections of short stories and three novels. Notably he was the first African American writer whose texts were published predominantly by leading periodicals such as the Atlantic Monthly and The Outlook and major publishers including Houghton Mifflin and Doubleday. The popular and critical success of his short stories in The Conjure Woman (March 1899) and The Wife of His Youth and Other Stories of the Color Line (fall 1899) set the stage for the 1900 publication of his first novel The House Behind the Cedars. His second novel The Marrow of Tradition was published a year later in 1901. Chesnutts final novel was The Colonels Dream (1905). In 1928 Charles Chesnutt was awarded the Springarn Medal by the National Association for the Advancement of Colored People in recognition of his literary achievements.
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