I am considering an opportunity for Heston to be dispatched from one of his employers to Morgan College in Baltimore, Maryland. She completed her high school career at Morgan University and graduated in June 1918. Heston studied part-time at Howard University the same year. While Hurston was studying at college she decided to support himself as "a nailist, waitress, and a maid to support myself" (D. Kaplan 2). During Howard 's study, Heston' s talent for literature began to appear. She played in 1921's first short story "John Redding Goes to the Sea." It was included in the literary magazine "Stylus" of the university.
Throughout Zola Neill Hurston 's lifetime she has achieved everything her ladies can achieve. She is a bestseller and she influenced women of all ages. From the 1930's to the 1960's, she published seven books, many short stories, articles of magazines, dramas, and so on. She experienced poverty and hardship for black people, but I never saw black mistakes. She felt that other people could benefit from the surroundings, because her darkness is so special. Her work is regarded as a declaration of a woman and shares a good side of a black life. In her most famous story, "They look at the eyes of God", she depicts Janie Crawford, a woman in her 40s.
Zora Neill Hurston, home of Eatonville, Florida, celebrated its annual festival life and was named after the Zora Neil Hurston Museum of Art. Every year, she celebrates her life and heritage at Zora Neill Hurston Art and Humanity's Festival. The library named for her opened in January 2004. Writer Alice Walker looked for Heston's tomb in 1973 and planted a tombstone called her "southern genius." Walker published "In Search of Zolanil Heston" in March 1975. Magazine evokes her interest in Heston's work. Heston's re-emphasis is also related to the emergence of new African-American writers such as Maya Angelo, Toni Morrison, Walker. Struggle
I thank Alice Walker for his interest in promoting Zora Neale Hurston and his work in the correct position of literature and women's history. Zora Neale Hurston is still vague if she did not mark the tomb of Zora Neale Hurston in 1973, or the article "Looking for Zora", or the name of the great author of the 1975 magazine. For black women geniuses and scribes, this is a big loss. At that time, Walker led the resurrection of Zola Neil Hirston, and Zora Neil Hurston's books were all out of print.