The Paris Exile: Chester Himes and the Hardboiled Transformation
The Paris Exile: Chester Himes and the Hardboiled Transformation In the 1950s, Paris became a refuge for African American writers seeking to escape the stifling racial atmosphere of the United States. Among this community of expatriates—which included giants such as Richard Wright and James Baldwin—was Chester Himes (1909–1984), a writer whose journey through the city would prove both harrowing and career-defining. From Hardship to Genre-Defining Success Upon his arrival in Paris in 1953, Himes faced severe financial instability. His early life in the United States had been marked by significant adversity, including seven and a half years of imprisonment in the Ohio Penitentiary starting in 1928, where he first began his writing career. This history of struggle followed him to France, where his initial years were characterized by extreme scarcity; it is well-documented that he lived in such poverty that he would sometimes scavenge for food near the banks of the Seine. However, a pi...