Alex Haley at a slave prison on Gorée Island, Senegal, 1977. [Credit: Michael Mauney—Time Life Pictures/Getty Images](born August 11, 1921, Ithaca, New York, U.S.—died February 10, 1992, Seattle, Washington) American writer whose works of historical fiction and reportage depicted the struggles of African Americans.
Although his parents were teachers, Haley was an indifferent student. He began writing to avoid boredom during voyages while serving in the U.S. Coast Guard (1939–59). His first major work, The Autobiography of Malcolm X (1965), was an authoritative and widely read narrative based on Haley's interviews with the Black Muslim spokesman. The work is recognized as a classic of African American literature.
Alex Haley (right) on the cover of Time magazine, Feb. 4, 1977, &elipsis; [Credit: Jim Britt—ABC TV/Time Magazine ©Time Inc./Time Life Pictures/Getty Images]Haley's greatest success was
Roots: The Saga of an American Family (1976). This saga covers seven American generations, from the enslavement of Haley's African ancestors to his own genealogical quest. The work forcefully shows relationships between generations and between races.
Roots was adapted as a multi-episode television program, which, when first broadcast in January 1977, became one of the most popular shows in the history of American television and galvanized attention on African American issues and history. That same year Haley won a special Pulitzer Prize. A successful sequel was first broadcast in February 1979 as
Roots: The Next Generations.
Cicely Tyson (left) and Maya Angelou (right) in a scene from the 1977 television adaptation of Alex &elipsis; [Credit: Fotos International/Hulton Archive/Getty Images] Roots spurred much interest in family history, and Haley created the Kinte Foundation (1972) to store records that aid in tracing black genealogy. Haley later admitted that his saga was partly fictional; the book was also the subject of a plagiarism suit, which Haley settled out of court.
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