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Lonesome Traveler, Lonesome Traveler, 0803297475, 0-8032-9747-5, 978-0-8032-9747-0, 9780803297470, Doris Willens Foreword by Pete Seeger

Lonesome Traveler
The Life of Lee Hays
Doris Willens
Foreword by Pete Seeger

paperback
1993. 299 pp.
Illus
978-0-8032-9747-0
$12.95 t
 

During the Great Depression, Lee Hays, the son of a Southern Methodist minister, used his music to life the hearts of sharecroppers and miners and union organizers. He helped bring black music to America's consciousness. He could make people laugh in times when there seemed little to laugh about. An Arkansas traveler and radical minstrel, he commented wryly on events and impaled reactionary southern congressmen on their own words. A kind of Mark Twain of the left, people said. But Lee Hays, for all his great size and talents and humor, was also a difficult man, plagued by self-doubts and a driving need to discombobulate any person or group that struck him as self-satisfied.
 
Lonesome Traveler is the story of a prodigious talent with a zeal for changing the world. With Pete Seeger he formed the popular folksinging group the Weavers, which sang songs of social justice just as a tidal wave of red-hunting hit America. The rest of his legendary story will anger, touch, and delight.

Doris Willens, a former newspaper columnist, lyricist, and playwright, divides her time between New York City and Northport, Long Island.

"[Lee] left us with a handful of songs and stories that the human race may never forget. I'm grateful that this book about his life is being reprinted. In it Lee Hays, still cantakerous and incomplete, still teaches new generations."—Pete Seeger, in his foreword

"Willens has written an excellent study of Lee Hays and his important work as a musical activist. . . . His biography makes for a fascinating look at some traumatic times in the history of America in the twentieth century."—Choice


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