In 1932 the young writer and political activist CLR James arrived in London
from his native Trinidad. During his first weeks in the city he wrote a series
of essays about his impressions and experiences for publication back home in the
Port of Spain Gazette. Seventy years later, these pieces, newly
transcribed from archives in the Caribbean, are published for the first time as
a collection, with an extensive introduction and notes.
Letters from London reveals CLR James' first encounter with the
colonial metropolis and the values that had already shaped his intellectual
development in Trinidad. Drawn to London's literary and political avant-garde,
he describes life in Bloomsbury, arguments with Edith Sitwell, visits to
theatres, museums and concert halls, and his seminal friendship with the great
West Indies cricketer, Learie Constantine. Initially in awe of London, James
soon develops a critical stance towards the city and its once mysterious people,
analysing their drab architecture, shallow newspapers and repressed social
relations. "Londoners have had sixty years of compulsory education and all the
advantages of a great modern city," he writes. "When you look at the
intellectual quality of the people, you are astonished."
A resurrected "classic" of considerable importance, Letters from
London provides a hitherto inaccessible picture of the young CLR James and
his formative period. This collection will appeal not just to Jamesites, but to
scholars of colonial and post-colonial history and those interested in
London.
CLR JAMES (1901-1989) was one of the 20th century's most innovative and
influential historians and political theorists. The author of books on the
Haitian Revolution, African independence and cricket, he was also a life-long
Marxist and political activist.