Tom Kromer

Thomas Michael Kromer (October 20, 1906 – January 10, 1969) was an American writer known for his one novel, Waiting for Nothing, an account of vagrant or hobo life during the 1930s.[1]

Biography

Kromer was born and raised in Huntington, West Virginia. He wrote his novel after five years of living as a hobo, riding trains and traveling across the United States. He spent 15 months in CCC camp but was mostly living as a vagabond.[1] He died in Cabell County, West Virginia.[2]

Waiting for Nothing

Dedicated "to Jolene, who turned off the gas," the work is a realistic account of life as a homeless man during the Great Depression. There is no overarching theme to the novel, which is a collection of anecdotes. Except for a few stories, Kromer said the incidents in the novel were autobiographical.[1]

Straightforward, declarative sentences in the tough-guy argot of the time ("I admire that stiff. He has got the guts. He does not like parting with his dough") are characteristic of Kromer, as are spare descriptions of grim scenes ("When I look at these stiffs by the fire, I am looking at a graveyard. There is hardly room to move between the tombstones. . . . The epitaphs are chiseled in sunken shadows on their cheeks"). The settings include rescue missions, flop houses, abandoned buildings and the sidewalk outside a nice restaurant. In one chapter, the narrator slowly comes to realize that the pitch-black boxcar he is riding in contains another rider, who is quietly, slowly, stalking him.[1]

Waiting for Nothing was first published by Alfred A. Knopf in 1935, reissued by Hill & Wang in 1968, and, in a definitive edition edited by Arthur D. Casciato and James L.W. West III, reprinted as Waiting for Nothing and Other Writings by the University of Georgia Press in 1986.

Agent

Kromer's literary agent was Maxim Lieber.[3]

gollark: I don't pollute the global scope with EVERYTHING.
gollark: Also, it's not `tau`, it's `potatOS.tau`.
gollark: It's Lua, not Python, apiopythohazard.
gollark: It's either potatOS's `tau` command or just infinite random numbers.
gollark: I've discovered something immensely troubling. EFI uses UTF-16 strings.

References

  1. "A Young Hobo; Waiting for Nothing. By Tom Kromer. 188 pp. New York: Alfred A. Knopf. $2". The New York Times. March 17, 1935. Retrieved July 4, 2017.
  2. West Virginia, Deaths Index, 1853-1973.
  3. Kromer, Tom (1935). Waiting for Nothing and Other Writings. Knopf (University of Georgia Press). p. 268. Retrieved 4 August 2014.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.