Sherwood Anderson (1876–1941) was born to a poor Ohio family and left school at age fourteen to do odd jobs. As an adult he was a laborer, soldier, copywriter, and manager until a mental breakdown forced him to pursue writing. His work focused on the psychological lives of characters emotionally crippled by isolation and lack of spiritual fulfillment, themes best expressed in his classic, Winesburg, Ohio. Married four times, Anderson died from peritonitis after swallowing a toothpick sliver in a martini olive. His epitaph: “Life, not death, is the great adventure.”

Photograph courtesy of the Library of Congress, LC-cph.3b16123

I Want to Know Why

A Story

by Sherwood Anderson

We got up at four in the morning, that first day in the east. On the evening before we had climbed off a freight train at the edge of town, and with the true instinct of Kentucky boys had found our way across town and to the race track and the stables at once. Then we knew we were all right. Hanley Turner right away found a nigger we knew. It was Bildad Johnson who in the winter works at Ed Becker’s livery barn in our home town, Beckersville. Bildad is a good cook as almost all our niggers are and of course he, like everyone in our part of Kentucky who is anyone at all, likes the horses. In the spring Bildad begins to scratch around. A nigger from our country can flatter and wheedle anyone into letting him do most anything he wants. Bildad wheedles the stable men and the trainers from the horse farms in our country around Lexington. The trainers come into town in the evening to stand around and talk and maybe get into a poker game. Bildad gets in with them. He is always doing little favors and telling about things to eat, chicken browned in a pan, and how is the best way to cook sweet potatoes and corn bread. It makes your mouth water to hear him.

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