Paperback ©1993 | -- |
for reading aloud. In powerful pictures, Feelings celebrates African creativity with realistic portraits of individual people set against landscapes flowing across space and time. Starting with drawings of people that he sketched while in Ghana, Senegal, Guyana, and the U.S., he has added color and light in a dramatic combination of collage and sweeping background. The pictures are full of character and strength, with women, men, and children dreaming, reading, working. The artist asked several great African American poets to write poems for his pictures, but not all these writers are at their best here. Some of the poems are messagey and abstract, perhaps because it's hard to match picture and words. One of the best pieces, however, Boyz n Search of Their Soular System, by Eugene B. Redmond, reaches out from the energy and hostility of the streets where gang-bangs reign and minds are too roughly w/rapped. Several pieces show and tell the power of the imagination: Maya Angelou talks of the tracks that new ideas make in her mind; a moving author note about Alexis De Veaux says that learning is a brightly burning passion for her, since she never forgets it was once illegal for Black people to learn to read and write. A final quote by Malcolm X celebrates education. (Reviewed Nov. 1, 1993)
Horn BookIn a harmonious blending of Feelings's artwork and verse by thirteen poets--including Margaret Walker, Langston Hughes, Maya Angelou, Lucille Clifton, and Eugene B. Redmond--the book looks to African roots for reaffirmation of the spirit of creativity in African-American life. Colored pencil, colored paper, stencil cut-outs, and other techniques bring a collage effect to the striking portraits.
Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)Continuing the reflection and celebration of African-American experiences begun in Something On My Mind (with Nikki Grimes, 1978) and Daydreamers (with Eloise Greenfield, 1981), Feelings pairs 13 poems (either new or, for the most part, previously inaccessible) by Maya Angelou, Langston Hughes, Walter Dean Myers, Margaret Walker, et al., with complex artwork involving blueprinting, stencilling, collage, and spray-painting. In full color for the first time, Feelings's arresting portraits are enhanced by strong horizontal background elements and stylized discs, bars, and dots. The poems convey an urgent need to bolster the hopes of a generation growing up in an environment where indifference and hostility are bullets aimed straight at the core of their spirits'' [preface]. Most poignant is Haki Madhubuti's
Destiny'': ``...take hold/do the necessary, the possible, the correctly simple/...do the expected, do what all people do/reverse destruction. capture tomorrows.'' Some of the poems are accessible to young readers; others are more suited to teenagers. Notes on the poets; no contents page or index. An outstandingly beautiful and powerful book. (Poetry/Picture book. 7+)"
Feelings approached 13 African-American authors to write poems for what PW called, in a starred review, his """"breathtaking"""" full-color collages; poets from Langston Hughes to Maya Angelou come together for this life-affirming celebration. Ages 5-up. (Jan.)
School Library JournalGr 5 Up-Artist Feelings invited poets whom he admired to compose original, short verses for these drawings, with breathtakingly rich and powerful results. A tribute to African-American creativity, the collection should appeal to the sensibilities and imaginations of many readers, regardless of ethnic background. A never-before published poem by Langston Hughes, written to accompany Feeling's 1962 poster for the Congress of Racial Equality, is included. The 11-line piece asks, All you who are dreamers too,/Help me to make/Our world anew./I reach out my dreams to you.'' Maya Angelou, Walter Dean Myers, and Lucille Clifton are among the 12 other contributors. The full-color, three-quarter and double-spread art depicts children and young people from West Africa, South America, and the United States, but a few of the poems do not speak to young children, e.g., Haki R. Madhubuti's
Destiny'': ``under volcanoes & timeless years within watch/and low tones. around corners, in deep caves among/misunderstood and sometimes meaningless sounds./ cut beggars, outlaw pimps & whores. resurrect work.'' That poem, as well as Eugene B. Redmond's Boyz n Search of Their Soular System, will prove more meaningful to adult and young adult readers.-Judy Greenfield, Rye Free Reading Room, NY
ALA Booklist (Mon Nov 01 00:00:00 CST 1993)
ALA/YALSA Best Book For Young Adults
Bulletin of the Center for Children's Books
Horn Book
Kirkus Reviews (Thu Apr 28 00:00:00 CDT 2022)
Publishers Weekly (Fri Oct 06 00:00:00 CDT 2023)
ALA/YALSA Quick Picks for Reluctant Young Adult Readers
School Library Journal
NCTE Adventuring With Books
NCTE High Interest-Easy Reading
NCTE Your Reading
Wilson's Children's Catalog
Wilson's Junior High Catalog
"The selections are uniformly uplifting, with affirming messages about the heritage, strength and dreams of African Americans."—Publishers Weekly
In this compelling collection of words and pictures, the voices of thirteen major poets, including Maya Angelou, Langston Hughes, and Walter Dean Myers, rise in response to the dazzling vistas and emotionally vivid portraits of award-winning artist Tom Feelings. A unique and moving collaboration that celebrates the sustaining spirit of African creativity.
Look at us / Darryl Holmes
Boyz n search of their soular system / Eugene B. Redmond
To you / Langston Hughes
History of my team / Walter Dean Myers
Window morning / Mwatabu Okantah
Destiny / Haki R. Madhubuti
I love the look of words / Maya Angelou
Africa you are beautiful / Rashidah Ismaili
Rhythms, harmonies, ancestors (a spirit rap) / Askia M. Toure
I am the creativity / Alexis De Veaux
Under the rainbow / Lucille Clifton
Who can be born black / Mari Evans.