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The Word: Black Writers Talk About the…
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The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing (udgave 2011)

af Marita Golden (Redaktør)

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332731,378 (4.6)Ingen
Critically acclaimed Black writers reveal how books have shaped their personal lives--in often unexpected ways. nbsp; In these thirteen strikingly candid interviews, bestselling authors, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, and writers picked by Oprah's Book Club discuss how the acts of reading and writing have deeply affected their lives by expanding the conceptual borders of their communities and broadening their sense of self. Edwidge Danticat movingly recounts the first time she encountered a Black character in a book and how this changed her worldview forever; Edward P. Jones speaks openly about being raised by an illiterate mother; J. California Cooper discusses the spiritual sources of her literary inspiration; Nathan McCall explains how reading saved his life while in prison; Pearl Cleage muses eloquently about how other people's stories help one make one's own way in the world; and world-renowned historian John Hope Franklin--in one of the last interviews he gave before his death--touchingly recalls his childhood in the segregated South and how reading opened his mind to life's greater possibilities. The stories that emerge from these in-depth interviews not only provide an important record of the creative life of leading Black writers but also explore the vast cultural and spiritual benefits of reading and writing, and they support the growing initiative to encourage people to read as both a passion and a pastime.… (mere)
Medlem:cargohook19
Titel:The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing
Forfattere:Marita Golden
Info:Broadway (2011), Edition: Original, Paperback, 224 pages
Samlinger:Dit bibliotek
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Nøgleord:Ingen

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The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing af Marita Golden (Editor)

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Summary: Interviews with notable Black writers about formative influences on their reading and writing, significant books and their particular writing callings.

This is a wonderful gateway book into the world of Black authors. Marita Golden engages in interviews with some of the foremost black authors filled with discussion of books that influenced their lives and of the books they have written. Each interview concludes with the interviewed author’s recommended books.

As if this were not enough, this is a work on reading and writing and the integral relation between the two. In many cases, parents were a significant influence in fostering a love of reading through reading aloud, through having books in the home and encouraging regular trips to the library. Columbus native Wil Haygood said, “I read my way into opportunity. The more I read, the more I realized the world was big and I could find a place in it.”

That was not always the case. Nathan McCall did not read until he went to prison and discovered Richard Wright on the prison book cart. He said:

“I had never been pulled into a book like that before. It just made me cry. I remember I finished it at about three o’clock in the morning and I was just weeping. After I read [Native Son] it was like, damn, I didn’t know somebody had written something like this” (p. 114).

He went on to read Malcolm X, Eldridge Cleaver, and George Jackson among others and started thinking about his own life and began writing down his thoughts in a notebook, the beginning of his life as a writer.

In the case of Edwidge Danticat, it was reading Ludwig Bemelmans Madeline that opened her eyes to the possibility of telling stories by writing them down. For Chimamanda N. Adichie, it was the experience of reading Chinua Achebe that opened her mind to the possibility of being a Nigerian writer. In fact, for so many, it was the model of another Black writer, of many Black writers that gave them the courage to write as well as expanding their cultural literacy and vision of the world.

For some, a book set them directly on their own writing career as was the case with David Levering Lewis, who has written Pulitzer Prize winning works on W. E. B. DuBois. Reading The Souls of Black Folk was transformative for him. J. California Cooper, the playwright, spoke of how Isaac Bashevis Singer taught him how to “take life and make it a great story.” We also learn about the journeys of these writers in becoming writers and some of their process, such as young Wil Haygood working for a pittance at the Columbus Call and Post and discovering how much he loved journalistic writing.

What all seem to agree upon is the importance of reading and books to enriching one’s writing life and that the two are inextricably bound together. This leads to a discussion in the book about the purported decline in reading, which Golden asks about in her interviews. While some decry this, some question whether younger readers are reading in different ways or simply have yet to find the books that answer to them. Nikki Giovanni presents the counterfactual that kids wanted to read the Harry Potter books (and at one point her own) so badly that they stole them if they couldn’t afford to buy them.

Book lovers love talking about or even overhearing conversations about books and how writers come to write the books we love. Reading this book is to overhear thirteen rich conversations that speak of the transformative power of both reading and writing. I will conclude by leaving you with this gem from Edwidge Danticat:

“Reading is important–although we can so easily go into platitudes here–because it expands your mind, your life. It extends your world. It’s traveling without a passport. I feel like there are people in my life I will never know as well as the people in the books that I’ve read. I believe that it’s the duty of every truly free citizen to read, especially to read beyond your borders, to read and read extensively. Writing is our footmark in the world. We’re still looking at cave writings of centuries ago and are asking, what are they saying? It’s one of the most important gifts we leave the world” (p. 72) ( )
  BobonBooks | May 30, 2021 |
I took notes after reading this book. I want to read all of the selected writers books and the books that made them dream. made them think. Books are alive and well, we just have to be blantant in what we are reading and tell others why we are reading it.

Great starting off point for those new to black fiction wanting to read non fiction/poetry and vice versa. ( )
  seki | Mar 18, 2011 |
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Forfatter navnRolleHvilken slags forfatterVærk?Status
Golden, MaritaRedaktørprimær forfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Adichie, Chimamanda NgoziBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Adiele, FaithBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Cleage, PearlBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Cooper, J. CaliforniaBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Cose, EllisBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Danticat, EdwidgeBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Franklin, John HopeBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Giovanni, NikkiBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Haygood, WilBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Johnson, MatBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Jones, Edward P.Bidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
Lewis, David LeveringBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
McCall, NathanBidragydermedforfatteralle udgaverbekræftet
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Critically acclaimed Black writers reveal how books have shaped their personal lives--in often unexpected ways. nbsp; In these thirteen strikingly candid interviews, bestselling authors, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, and writers picked by Oprah's Book Club discuss how the acts of reading and writing have deeply affected their lives by expanding the conceptual borders of their communities and broadening their sense of self. Edwidge Danticat movingly recounts the first time she encountered a Black character in a book and how this changed her worldview forever; Edward P. Jones speaks openly about being raised by an illiterate mother; J. California Cooper discusses the spiritual sources of her literary inspiration; Nathan McCall explains how reading saved his life while in prison; Pearl Cleage muses eloquently about how other people's stories help one make one's own way in the world; and world-renowned historian John Hope Franklin--in one of the last interviews he gave before his death--touchingly recalls his childhood in the segregated South and how reading opened his mind to life's greater possibilities. The stories that emerge from these in-depth interviews not only provide an important record of the creative life of leading Black writers but also explore the vast cultural and spiritual benefits of reading and writing, and they support the growing initiative to encourage people to read as both a passion and a pastime.

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