John Edgar Wideman has outlived many of his peers. Born in Washington, D.C., in 1941, he grew up in the Homewood neighborhood of Pittsburgh and went on to attend the University of Pennsylvania. In 1963, he became the second African American to win a Rhodes scholarship, and in 1967, he got his MFA at the Iowa Writers’ Workshop, where he’d studied under Kurt Vonnegut, among other luminaries. That same year, Harcourt published his first novel, A Glance Away, and he was off to the races. Since then, Wideman has published nine more novels, six collections of short stories, and five memoirs, earning nearly every award possible in the process. And he shows no signs of stopping. His commitment to finding new stories to tell, his attentive chronicling of persistence through…