E. Lynn Harris
- In full:
- Everette Lynn Harris
- Died:
- July 23, 2009, Los Angeles, Calif. (aged 54)
- Also Known As:
- Everette Lynn Harris
- Notable Works:
- “Invisible Life”
E. Lynn Harris (born June 20, 1955, Flint, Mich., U.S.—died July 23, 2009, Los Angeles, Calif.) was an American author, who in a series of novels drew on his personal familiarity with the gay community to chronicle the struggles faced by African American men with sexual identity concerns. He used his own unhappy childhood and his experiences as a gay man who was closeted for a time as impetus for his books. His works appealed to a wide audience: of his 11 published novels, 10 were on the New York Times best-seller list.
Harris grew up in Little Rock, Ark. He studied journalism at the University of Arkansas (B.A., 1977), where he also was the first male cheerleader. He wrote his first novel—Invisible Life (1994; self-published in 1991), based on his own experiences—after having worked for 13 years as a salesman for IBM and other computer companies. In the book, he revealed an until-then little-publicized practice of life “on the down-low,” a reference to men who have secret sexual relationships with other men. Invisible Life is the story of Raymond Tyler, Jr., a young African American attorney who is torn between his love for a man (and the decision to make public his sexual orientation) and his appreciation of and love for a young woman.
Featuring successful athletes and other professional people, Harris’s works—though not particularly literary—had broad appeal, owing to their well-developed characters and their author’s generous, perceptive approach. His later works include Just as I Am (1994), If This World Were Mine (1997), A Love of My Own (2002), and the memoir What Becomes of the Brokenhearted (2003). His final novel, Basketball Jones, was published in early 2009. Harris also lectured extensively and appeared on Broadway in Dreamgirls and Love Letters to America.