

Kyra Davis Lurie: Reimagining Gatsby
11 snips Aug 19, 2025
Kyra Davis Lurie, an accomplished author known for her Just One Night trilogy, shares her complex admiration for F. Scott Fitzgerald and her fresh take on The Great Gatsby. She dives into the historical context of Black wealth in 1940s Los Angeles, exploring societal perceptions and the challenges for Black elites. Lurie highlights the vibrant Sugar Hill community, the repercussions of racial covenants, and how themes of trust and identity play out in her reimagined narrative. It's a rich discussion blending literature, race, and history.
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Fitzgerald's Casual Racism Shaped A Reader
- Fitzgerald used casual racial disparagement as a cheap laugh, reflecting his private bigotry.
- Kyra Davis Lurie says this shaped her early reading and complicated her love of The Great Gatsby.
The Tulsa Massacre Devastated Black Wealth
- In 1919 Tulsa's Black Wall Street was a wealthy Black community of doctors, lawyers, and entrepreneurs.
- White mobs bombed and destroyed the neighborhood in a massacre that was later suppressed from public view.
Sugar Hill: LA's Black Elite Neighborhood
- Sugar Hill (West Adams Heights) became Los Angeles's elite Black neighborhood after the 1929 crash.
- Kyra Davis Lurie found it Gatsby-esque: wealthy Black residents bought former white mansions and created a vibrant community.