Naleighna Kai's Literary Cafe Magazine January 2018 New Year, New You | Page 28

Zora Neale Hurston In 1917, Hurston was in Maryland, where “colored youths” age 20 and under were eligible for free public school classes. The only problem was that Hurston had been born in 1891, which made her 26. She came up with a solution: Hurston told people that she’d been born in 1901 instead. This allowed her to attend night school, the first step on a path that would take her to Howard University, Barnard College and beyond. From that moment, Hurston’s altered birth date remained a part of her story — even the grave marker that Alice Walker had erected for Hurston in the 1970s incorrectly notes her birth year as 1901. Hurston worked at a variety of jobs, from manicurist, to Fannie Hurst’s secretary, to writer for Paramount and Warner Brothers Studios, to librarian at the Library of Congress, to drama coach at North Carolina College for Negroes. Hurston began her writing career while at Howard when she wrote her first short story for Stylus, a college literary magazine. She continued to write stories, and in 1925 won first prize in the Opportunity literary contest for “Spunk.” In 1939 Morgan College awarded her an honorary doctorate. In 1943 she received the Annisfield Award for the autobiographical Dust Tracks on the Road; also in 1943 Howard University bestowed its alumni award upon her. Although Hurston worked all of her life at many jobs and was a prolific writer, money was always a serious problem. In the late 1940s she returned to Florida and worked as a maid in Riva Alto. After several efforts to re-kindle her writing career, she died in poverty in the town of her birth. 28 | NKLC Magazine