100 Best African-American Poems
100 Best African-American Poems
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Publisher's Hardcover ©2010--
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Sourcebooks, Inc
Annotation: Award-winning poet and writer Nikki Giovanni selects the 100 best African-American poems ever written.
Genre: [Poetry]
 
Reviews: 2
Catalog Number: #4486620
Format: Publisher's Hardcover
Common Core/STEAM: Common Core Common Core
Publisher: Sourcebooks, Inc
Copyright Date: 2010
Edition Date: 2010 Release Date: 10/31/10
Pages: 228 pages
ISBN: 1-402-22111-8
ISBN 13: 978-1-402-22111-8
Dewey: 811.008
Dimensions: 21 cm. + 1 CD (4 3/4 in.)
Language: English
Reviews:
ALA Booklist (Mon Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2010)

Go-to poet and reigning literary activist Giovanni admits in her introduction that she "cheated": she just couldn't keep to that nice round number in the title. And who can blame her. As Giovanni enthuses in her peppy introduction, "Poems are like . . . two scoops of chocolate ice cream . . . something everyone can enjoy." Her vivid and affecting selections add up to a complexly pleasurable anthology. The delight is in the musical, inventive, and vivid language; the astute insights and humor, passion and tenderness. But these are poems born of suffering and injustice, even as they reach for truth and wisdom. Margaret Walker Alexander's "For My People" sets the tone in its embrace of African American history, and well-known poets such as Gwendolyn Brooks, Lucille Clifton, Robert Hayden, and Kevin Young follow, along with many new voices, all treated equally, since no poet biographies are included. Langston Hughes asks, "What happens to a dream deferred?" Georgia Douglas Johnson answers, "Dream your dream anew." Poets and other performers read 36 poems on the accompanying CD.

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ALA Booklist (Mon Nov 01 00:00:00 CDT 2010)
Wilson's High School Catalog
Reading Level: 5.0
Interest Level: 9+

From the Introduction:

Poems are like clouds on a June morning or two scoops of chocolate ice cream on a sugar cone in August...something everyone can enjoy. Or maybe poems are your cold feet in December on your lover's back...he is in agony but he lets your feet stay...something like that requires a bit of love. Or could it be that poems are exactly like Santa Claus...the promise, the hope, the excitement of a reward, no matter how small, for a good deed done...or a mean deed from which we refrained. The promise of tomorrow. I don't know. It seems that poems are essential. Like football to Fall, baseball to Spring, tennis to Summer, love Anytime. Something you don't think too much about until it is in Season. Then you deliciously anticipate the perfection. African American poems are like all other poems: beautiful, loving, provocative, thoughtful, and all those other adjectives I can think of.

Poems know no boundaries. They, like all Earth citizens, were born in some country, grew up on some culture, then in their blooming became citizens of the Universe. Poems fly from heart to heart, head to head, to whisper a dream, to share a condolence, to congratulate, and to vow forever. The poems are true. They are translated and they are celebrated. They are sung, they are recited, they are delightful. They are neglected. They are forgotten. They are put away. Even in their fallow periods they sprout images. And fight to be revived. And spring back to life with a bit of sunshine and caring.

These poems, this book, admit I cheated. The idea of this and no more would simply not work for me. I needed these plus those. My mother's favorite poem by Robert Hayden, plus James Weldon Johnson beginning a world that included the longing of the unfree for a loving God. My own fun "Ego Tripping" reaching to embrace Margaret Walker's "For My People." "Train Rides" and "Nikki-Rosa" read by old and loving friends. But also the newness: Novella Nelson lending that sultry voice to the youngsters; Ruby Dee bringing her brilliance to the Gwendolyn Brooks cycle. My Virginia Tech Family wanted to participate: our president Dr. Charles Steger reading "The Negro Speaks of Rivers," recognizing all our souls "have grown deep like the rivers." We celebrate our Hips; we See A Negro Lady at a birthday celebration. Our friends from James Madison University and West Virginia University came to celebrate poetry with us, too. I love these poems so much. The only other thing I would have loved is Caroline Kennedy reading "A Clean Slate."

At the end of a loving day of laughter in Jeff Dalton's studio, when Clinton's makeup had taken forty years off some of us and twenty-five off others, we all came together with one last great cry: the Dean of our College; the Director of Honors; young, old, professional, professor, and recited in one great voice "We Real Cool." Yeah. We are. This book says Poetry Is For Everyone. What a Treat to be Snowbound with The 100* Best African American Poems (*but I cheated).

I did cheat.
It's true.
But I did not lie.

Nikki Giovanni
Poet
12 December 2009



Excerpted from The 100 Best African American Poems by Nikki Giovanni
All rights reserved by the original copyright owners. Excerpts are provided for display purposes only and may not be reproduced, reprinted or distributed without the written permission of the publisher.

Winner of the NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work -- Poetry.Hear voices contemporary and classic as selected by New York Times bestselling author Nikki Giovanni.Award-winning poet and writer Nikki Giovanni takes on the impossible task of selecting the 100 best African American works from classic and contemporary poets. Out of necessity, Giovanni admits she cheats a little, selecting a larger, less round number. The result is this startlingly vibrant collection that spansfrom historic to modern, from structured to freeform, and reflects the rich roots and visionary future of African American verse. These magnetic poems are an exciting mix of most-loved classics and daring new writing. From Gwendolyn Brooks and Langston Hughes to Tupac Shakur, Natasha Trethewey, and many others, the voice of a culture comes through in this collection, one that is as talented, diverse, and varied as its people."African American poems are like all other poems: beautiful, loving,provocative, thoughtful, and all those other adjectives I can think of. Poems know no boundaries. They, like all Earth citizens, were born in some country, grew up on some culture, then in their blooming became citizens of the Universe. Poems fly from heart to heart, head to head, to whisper a dream, to share a condolence, to congratulate, and to vow forever. The poems are true. They are translated and they are celebrated. They are sung, they are recited, they are delightful. They are neglected. They are forgotten. They are put away. Even in their fallow periods they sprout images. And fight to be revived. And spring back to life with a bit of sunshine and caring." --Nikki GiovanniRead:- Gwendolyn Brooks- Kwame Alexander- Tupac Shakur- Langston Hughes- Mari Evans- Kevin Young- Asha Bandele- Amiri BarakaHear:- Ruby Dee- Novella Nelson- Nikki Giovanni- Elizabeth Alexander- Marilyn Nelson- Sonia Sanchez- And many, many, more...


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