Go Tell It On The Mountain,
first published in 1953, is Baldwin's first major work, a
semi-autobiographical novel that has established itself as an American
classic. With lyrical precision, psychological directness, resonating
symbolic power, and a rage that is at once unrelenting and
compassionate, Baldwin chronicles a fourteen-year-old boy's discovery of
the terms of his identity as the stepson of the minister of a
storefront Pentecostal church in Harlem one Saturday in March of 1935.
Baldwin's rendering of his protagonist's spiritual, sexual, and moral
struggle of self-invention opened new possibilities in the American
language and in the way Americans understand themselves.
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