x aC k n O w le d G m e nT S Forsythe for her production work, Laurence Nozik for his cover design, and Laurie Avery for the inspired promotional efforts. We also give thanks to Bonnie Hanks for a superb index. GEH is obliged to the Journal of Modern Literature, as a portion of the research published here appears in "The Sun Also Rises in Queer Black Harlem: Hemingway and McKay's Modernist Intertext," in JML 30.4, published in September 2007. In addition, GEH would like to thank Ronald Stephens, past chair of the Department of African American Studies, for his assistance in requesting leave time from teaching duties to work on the manuscript during Fall 2010, and the College of Arts and Sciences, Ohio University, for granting it. GEH gives a special shout out to the fine scholar and his good friend Bill Maxwell for the intellectual bonhomie, distinguished scholar and comrade collaborator Amrit Singh for the lively confabs, and Michael Gillespie for the solidarity and reflections à propos Baldwin, Ellison, and Himes. Thanks also to Suzanne del Gizzo and Debra Moddelmog for invaluable exchanges over the topic of Hemingway and African Americans. And a loving thanks to Kim Holcomb for partaking in countless dialogues related to this project over the course of some seven years. Without Kim's urging to persevere, this book would not be.