Rosa Guy (born September 1, 1922, Trinidad, West Indies—died June 3, 2012, New York, New York, U.S.) was an American writer who drew on her own experiences to create fiction for young adults that usually concerned individual choice, family conflicts, poverty, and the realities of life in urban America and the West Indies.
Cuthbert lived in Trinidad until 1932, when she moved to the United States to join her parents, who had already immigrated. She grew up in New York City’s Harlem. At age 14, after both of her parents died, she was compelled to go to work in a factory, and in 1941 she married Walter Guy. She eventually studied writing at New York University and became active in the American Negro Theatre. In the late 1940s, after the dissolution of her marriage, Guy cofounded the Harlem Writers Guild and focused on her fiction.
Guy’s first novel, Bird at My Window (1966), is set in Harlem and examines the relationship between black mothers and their children, as well as the social forces that foster the demoralization of black men. Children of Longing (1970), which Guy edited, contains accounts of black teens’ and young adults’ firsthand experiences and aspirations. After the publication of these works, she traveled in the Caribbean and lived in Haiti and Trinidad. Guy became best known for a frank coming-of-age trilogy that featured The Friends (1973), Ruby (1976), and Edith Jackson (1978). She also wrote a number of books centring on Imamu Jones, a young African American detective in Harlem; the series included The Disappearance (1979), New Guys Around the Block (1983), and And I Heard a Bird Sing (1987). Among her other works are A Measure of Time (1983), Paris, Pee Wee, and Big Dog (1984), My Love, My Love; or, The Peasant Girl (1985, on which the successful 1990 Broadway musical Once on This Island was based), The Ups and Downs of Carl David III (1989), Billy the Great (1991), and The Music of Summer (1992). The Sun, the Sea, a Touch of the Wind (1995), a novel for adults, centres on an American artist living in Haiti who reexamines her troubled past.