Born in the 1880s in Jefferson, Texas, Lillian B. Jones Horace grew up  in Fort Worth and dreamed of being a college-educated teacher, a goal  she achieved. But life was hard for her and other blacks living and  working in the Jim Crow South. Her struggles convinced her that  education, particularly that involving the printed word, was the key to  black liberation.
 In 1916, before Marcus Garvey gained fame for advocating black economic  empowerment and a repatriation movement, Horace wrote a back-to-Africa  novel, Five Generations Hence, the earliest published novel on  record by a black woman from Texas and the earliest known utopian novel  by any African American woman. She also wrote a biography of Lacey Kirk  Williams, a renowned president of the National Baptist Convention;  another novel, Angie Brown, that was never published; and a host of plays that her students at I. M. Terrell High School performed. Five Generations Hence  languished after its initial publication. Along with Horace’s diary,  the unpublished novel, and the Williams biography, the book was  consigned to a collection owned by the Tarrant County Black Historical and Genealogical Society and housed at the Fort Worth Public Library.  There, scholar and author Karen Kossie-Chernyshev rediscovered Horace’s  work in the course of her efforts to track down and document a literary  tradition that has been largely ignored by both the scholarly community  and general readers. In this book, the full text of Horace’s Five Generations Hence,  annotated and contextualized by Kossie-Chernyshev, is once again  presented for examination by scholars and interested readers.In 2009  Kossie-Chernyshev invited nine scholars to a conference at Texas  Southern University to give Horace’s works a comprehensive  interdisciplinary examination. Subsequent work on those papers resulted  in the studies that form the second half of this book.