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The Urban Historical Series
The series | New York Sawed in Half | Ghosty Men | Rough Amusements | Typhoid Mary    
 
Rough Amusements

When A'Lelia Walker died in 1931 after a midnight snack of lobster and chocolate cake washed down with champagne, it marked the end of one of the most striking social careers in New York’s history. The daughter of rags-to-riches multi-millionaire Madame C.J. Walker (the washerwoman who marketed the most successful straightening technique for African American hair), A'Lelia was America's first black poor little rich girl, using her inheritance to throw elaborate, celebrity-packed parties in her Westchester mansion and her 136th Street would-be salon, 'Dark Tower'.

In Rough Amusements, third in Bloomsbury's Urban Historicals series, Neihart takes us into the heart of A'Lelia's world — gay Harlem in the 1920's. In tracing its cultural antecedents, he delves into the sexual subculture of nineteenth-century New York, exploring mixed-race prostitution; the bachelorisation of New York society; French balls ('the most sophisticated forum for testing the boundaries of urban sexual behaviour'); and 'The Slide' (New York's most depraved nineteenth-century bar). Using A'Lelia's lavish parties as a jumping-off point, Neihart traces the line connecting Davy Crockett's world without women to Walt Whitman's boundless love of beautiful men to A'lelia's cultivation of the racial, social, and sexual risk that defined the Harlem Renaissance.

Ben Heihart is the author of the novels Hey, Joe and Burning Girl. His writing has appeared in such publications as The New Yorker, Travel & Leisure, The Baltimore Sun, and Book Forum. He lives in Brooklyn.