Jimmy Worthy IIs introduction to After a Thousand Tears provides readers with a new way to understand Georgia Douglas Johnson and her poetry. In this previously unpublished and recently recovered volume, Worthy identifies a poetic presence of what he terms 'discursive veiling' and thus explores how Johnson persistently navigated contemporary racial and gender restrictions to create an open space in which to express her free, individual self. Drawing on literary scholarship from the New Negro Movement/Harlem Renaissance to the present, this valuable, insightful study reveals how Johnsons poems both reflect and defy the era in which they were written while remaining a beacon for our own. -- Judith L. Stephens-Lorenz * editor of The Plays of Georgia Douglas Johnson: From the New Negro Renaissance to the Civil Rights Movement * This book is a welcomed daylighting of work by the prolific and profound twentieth-century writer Georgia Douglas Johnson. It is a valuable, perhaps even an invaluable, asset to scholarly communities in literature, Black studies, gender studies, history, and more. -- Camille T. Dungy * author of Soil: The Story of a Black Mother's Garden * Professor Worthy's robust and sensitive re-presentation of Georgia Douglas Johnson for a new era is literary lineage making of a very high order. Long live GDJand this scholarly work! -- Akasha Gloria T. Hull * author of Color, Sex, and Poetry: Three Women Writers of the Harlem Renaissance * In excavating a previously unpublished volume by Georgia Douglas Johnson from the archives, scholar Jimmy Worthy II has engaged in extraordinary ancestral tending. As a poet myself, I feel incredibly grateful to receive this new gift of Johnsons verse. -- Honorée Fanonne Jeffers * author of The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois * Despite the fact that Georgia Douglas Johnson was one of the most prolific, popular, and influential poets of the Harlem Renaissance, she has languished in neglect. Thanks to the work of Black feminist scholars such as Maureen Honey, Claudia Tate, Gloria Hull, and Evie Shockley, we have more accurate and insightful critical frameworks for reading Harlem Renaissance women writers, many of whom were maligned for their alleged lack of racial politics or for their alleged escapism through romance. And now we have, in After a Thousand Tears, a recovery project that gives us a fuller and deeper sense of Johnsons poetic voice and vision. Here, Jimmy Worthy II applies these Black feminist frameworks to give us a portrait of Johnson fully alive to her cultural and political moment. In particular, Worthy provides a critical introduction that explains how the masculinist politics of Harlem Renaissance architects, combined with the racism of the era, created severely circumscribed spaces within which Black women writers were compelled to maneuver. From there, he goes on to read for Johnsons ability to manipulate and critique these spaces in order to create her own poetic voice. The lyric poetry of After a Thousand Tears and Worthys critical introduction make a monumental contribution to our understanding of Georgia Douglas Johnsons artistry and the complex racial and gender politics of the Harlem Renaissance more generally. For scholars and students alike, After a Thousand Tears is an essential volume. -- Mark A. Sanders * author of Afro-Modernist Aesthetics and the Poetry of Sterling A. Brown * Jimmy Worthy IIs recovery of this text opens a new chapter for arguably one of the most prolific poets of the Harlem Renaissance. This collection, with Worthys comprehensive introduction, makes a significant contribution to the study of African American womens poetics and literary history. -- Michelle J. Pinkard * Legacy *