A Born Writer
Juanita Harrison and Her Beautiful World
Format:Paperback
Publisher:University of Massachusetts Press
Publishing:31st Oct '25
£27.99
This title is due to be published on 31st October, and will be despatched as soon as possible.
This paperback is available in another edition too:
- Hardback£82.00(9781625349002)

The first biography of a best-selling travel writer dedicated to the pursuit of leisure, freedom, and experience
Despite the challenges she faced as an average southern Black woman of her time, Juanita Harrison transcended expectations, earning a unique place in African American and literary history. Over the course of more than fifty years, she travelled constantly, first throughout the US and then throughout the world. To fund her trips, she took on short-term jobs as maid, cook, and nurse, never committing to any one household. Always on the move, she made it a rule to travel alone, and she had a penchant for 'passing,' not as white but as local. Her wanderlust was less aspirational and upwardly mobile than dedicated to the pursuit of leisure, freedom, and experience. "It's my life to see and enjoy," she declared.
In 1936, she published My Great, Wide, Beautiful World, a travelogue that charts her life between 1927 and 1935. A compilation of letters she sent to friends, employers, and patrons during her travels, the book was an immediate success, running through nine printings within ten months and becoming a bestseller for that year. The illustrious Atlantic Monthly published excerpts, the book was reviewed in newspapers and magazines nationwide, and it attracted a remarkably diverse readership, sparking the enthusiasm of Black working-class library patrons, white women's book clubs, Japanese American journalists, Harlem Renaissance luminaries, and many others. It came back into print in 1996, ensuring her legacy would endure.
A Born Writer is the first biography of this fascinating woman who found a uniquely rewarding way to live and work that many would envy today. Combining micro histories, literary criticism, and biography- and despite limited archival records- Cathryn Halverson skillfully traces Harrison from her birth in the bitterly divided South to her death in Hawai'i, tracking her varied experiences along the way in New York, Havana, Paris, Madrid, Cairo, Mumbai, Kobe, Buenos Aires, and many other places. The resulting portrait shows a woman who transcended all kinds of borders- political, social, and cultural- to experience a freedom rarely available to women, and especially women of color, in the early-to-mid twentieth century, an achievement that continues to resonate.
"Halverson is the preeminent scholar on Juanita Harrison, an important, increasingly well-known but under-researched African American writer. Her sensitive and deeply researched book draws on a rich body of Black feminist scholarship on archival silences to create a detailed account of a woman who worked hard to control the narratives of her life by publishing her own carefully curated account." - Kate Dossett, author of Radical Black Theatre in the New Deal
"Halverson has produced a book that is not only scholarly and rigorous but also a joy to read, as Harrison and her world come alive on the page. Her focus on the work and experiences of a Black female writer and traveler in the last nineteenth and twentieth centuries makes an important contribution to African American and travel writing studies." - Gary Totten, author of African American Travel Narratives from Abroad: Mobility and Cultural Work in the Age of Jim Crow
ISBN: 9781625348999
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 454g
296 pages