A Program of the University of Georgia Libraries
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Honorees

John Oliver Killens

Born: January 14, 1916
Macon, Georgia
Died: October 27, 1987
Brooklyn, NY

*John O. Killens photograph courtesy of the Carl Van Vechten collection and the Library of Congress

BIOGRAPHY

John Oliver Killens' politically charged novels earned this Macon native two Pulitzer Prize nominations, and his works of fiction and nonfiction have been translated into more than a dozen languages. An influential essayist, screenwriter and teacher, he co-founded the important Harlem Writers Guild and worked as a teacher and lecturer at many schools and universities, including Fisk, Howard, and Columbia.

Killens grew up hearing his great-grandmother's stories of her childhood under slavery and reading the writings of Paul Lawrence Dunbar and Langston Hughes that his parents provided. He set out to become a lawyer and worked for the National Labor Relations Board in Washington D.C. from 1936-1942, but World War II military service interrupted his legal career. After serving with the Army in the South Pacific, Killens landed in New York City as a student, political organizer and newswriter. Introduced to the African American artistic community there, he helped organize the Harlem Writers Guild and wrote his first novel. Youngblood (1954) told the story of an African-American family's struggles in the fictional town of "Crossroads, Georgia" during the Jim Crow era of the 1920s, and it has been republished several times, most recently by the University of Georgia Press.

His novels And Then We Heard the Thunder and 'Sippi dramatized racism in the U.S. Army during World War II and the South during the voting rights struggles of the 1960s. Both And Then We Heard the Thunder and Killens's satirical novel about black class divisions, Cotillion, or One Good Bull Is Half the Herd, were nominated for the Pulitzer Prize for fiction.

A vice president of the Black Academy of Arts and Letters and a board member of the National Center for Afro-American Artists, Killens was among a select group of North American writers noted in the monumental 1999 reference work Africana: The Encyclopedia of the African and African American Experience.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

The following titles may be found in the Hall of Fame Library:

Youngblood. London: Bodley Head, 1956.

And Then We Heard the Thunder. Knopf, 1963.

Black Man's Burden. New York: Trident Press, 1965.

Youngblood. New York: Trident Press; [distributed by Affiliated Publishers] 1966.

'Sippi. New York: Trident Press, 1967.

Esclaves. Not Published, 1969.

The Cotillion; or, One Good Bull Is Half the Herd. New York: Trident Press, 1971.

Great Gittin' Up Morning: Biography of Denmark Vesey. Doubleplay, 1972.

A Man Ain't Nothin' but a Man: The Adventures of John Henry. Little, Brown, 1975.

Youngblood. Athens: University of Georgia Press, 1982.

RECORDINGS:

Killens, John Oliver and Nelson Gidding. Odds Against Tomorrow. Belafonte Productions/United Artists, 1959.

Trial Records of Denmark Vesey. Beacon, 1970. John O. Killens on Alexander Pushkin (audio cassette). New York: Institute of Afro-American Affairs, 1976.

John Oliver Killens (audio cassette). Washington, D.C.: Tapes for Readers, 1978.

ADDITIONAL RESOURCES

Manuscript Holdings

Emory University (Atlanta) and Boston University hold major collections of John Oliver Killens' literary manuscripts, personal papers, and official and personal correspondence.