Darryl Pinckney


Darryl Pinckney is an American novelist, playwright, and essayist.

Early life

Pinckney grew up in a middle-class African-American family in Indianapolis, Indiana, where he attended local public schools. He was educated at Columbia University in New York City.

Career

Some of Pinckney's first professional works were theatre texts, plays developed in collaboration with director Robert Wilson. These included the produced works of The Forest and Orlando. Pinckney returned to theatre with Time Rocker.
His first book was High Cotton, a semi-autobiographical novel about "growing up black and bourgeois" in 1960s America. His second novel was Black Deutschland, about a young gay black man in Berlin, Germany, in the late 1980s, just before the fall of the Berlin Wall.
Pinckney has published several collections of essays covering topics such as African-American literature, politics, race, and other cultural issues. He is also a frequent contributor to the New York Review of Books, Granta, Slate, and The Nation. He frequently explores issues of racial and sexual identities, as expressed in literature and society.
Pinckney's memoir Come Back in September was published in 2022. Rachel Cooke in an interview for The Observer described reading it as "like being at a particularly fabulous literary party....But the real star of the show – the book's constant and slightly terrifying presence – is the critic and novelist Elizabeth Hardwick, Pinckney’s friend of more than three decades and the key that first turned the lock on his exciting New York life."

Awards

Personal life

Pinckney is gay and lives with his partner, English poet James Fenton; the couple has been together since 1989. Pinckney currently lives in New York City, but previously lived with Fenton in Oxfordshire, England.

Books

High Cotton Sold and Gone: African American Literature and U.S. Society Out There: Mavericks of Black Literature Blackballed: The Black Vote and US Democracy Black Deutschland Busted in New York and Other Essays
  • ''Come Back in September: A Literary Education on West Sixty-seventh Street, Manhattan''

Selected essays

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Theatre texts

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