Sylvia Colbert's biography of Lorraine Hansberry is the kind of book that patiently waits for me to be ready for it—then rewards my attention with surprising depth. I found myself reading it in stops and starts over years, not because it wasn’t compelling. Life kept interrupting me. This is not an “I liked it!” book for me; it’s a book I deeply appreciate. I came to realize, as I reached its final chapters (returning after a long pause), just how purposeful Colbert’s focus is: she looks through Hansberry’s writing—her plays, speeches, interviews—and from that lens offers glimpses into Hansberry’s life, her intellectual journey, her choices, and her relationships.
What strikes me most is how Colbert resists the easy route of sensationalism or "behind-the-scenes" gossip. Instead, she offers a true intellectual biography, one that respects Hansberry not only as a playwright or Black icon, but as a radical presence: a Black feminist, a queer socialist, a pan-Africanist, a thinker whose chosen medium was theater but whose ideas belonged to the world.
The biography shines in the way it situates Hansberry amid her era—socially, politically, intellectually, globally—without losing sight of her humanity. Colbert’s attention to Hansberry’s relationships with women is especially welcome, particularly her intense, lifelong friendship and creative partnership with Nina Simone. These sections illuminate so much about how Hansberry thought, worked, and loved.
Grateful to Colbert for letting Hansberry’s voice come through undiminished, and for keeping the emphasis on the thoughts and convictions in her work—the passions and urgencies that made her not only a brilliant playwright, but a voice, a fiery justice seeking voice, for her generation.
I’m reminded of a line from Hansberry’s journal (not quoted by Colbert, but unforgettable for me), from "To Be Young, Gifted, and Black":
“If anything should happen—before 'tis done—may I trust that all commas and periods will be placed and someone will complete my thoughts. This last should be the least difficult since there are so many who think as I do.”
For me, Colbert has done just that: she’s helped place the commas and periods, and continues—by means of Hansberry’s own words—to complete Hansberry's ongoing, urgent thoughts.