Richard Wright's novel "Black Boy" is autobiography about his life. "Black Boy" covered his life in the south from Memphis, Tennessee to Mississippi, and moved there as he grew older. In the novel light he talked about his struggle to grow up in Jim Crow's law and was abandoned by his father. The light that grew up in poverty, starvation, fear, hatred, and confusion felt it necessary to criticize the people around us, improving the feelings about life. Wright brothers also have obstacles, which make her hard to earn money because she can not work so much, and the majority of their income depends on his elderly grandmother and himself.
Richard Nathaniel Wright was born on September 4, 1908 at the Mississippi plantation. He felt hungry often in childhood of the light. Since pain is an integral part of his own life, this makes it possible to write the meaning of the light suffering in the lives of people who are passionately and eloquently suppressed and exploited. The Communist Party had a strong interest in Wright 's life and was the only man who proposed teaching to write to him once. Richard Wright died in Paris at the age of 52 on November 28, 1960
Richard (September 4, 1960 - November 4, 1908 - November 1960), a writer born in Richard Nathaniel Wright, Luca's plantation in Rosie, Mississippi Natchez, a son of illiterate tenant Nathaniel Wright and a school Between teacher Ella Wilson. When Wright was five years old, his father left the family and his mother was forced to do chores from housework. Lite and his brother stayed at the orphanage for a while. Early 1920, Ella Wright became leader, the family moved from Arkansas State Natchez to Jackson and Elaine, then returned to Jackson to live with the limited seventh day adventurer Wright's grandparents. In June 1925 Light went from school to school, graduated from Jackson's Smithsonian middle school, became a class fare actor. Wright published his first short story "Half Voodoo Half Hero" in three parts. In the Southern Register of 1924, the copy did not survive