Tuesday, March 31, 2009

NaPoWriMo: National Poetry Month

For those of you who don't know, April is National Poetry Month. To celebrate, the staff at readwritepoem are officially supporting NaPoWriMo: 30 Poems in 30 days. A month long project started by poet, Maureen Thorson at Gourd is My Co-pilot.

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I'll be participating this year. I will not be subjecting you to every brain fart, but occasionally, I'll share a draft if it is not ridiculously rough. If you'd like to join, leave your name and link to your blog here or at readwritepoem. Wherever you link, know that you can count on me to come by and cheer you on.

Color Online Quiz: Literature and Women Studies

Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #21

Born November 29, 1926(1999) in Stockton, California. This is Asian American costume designer, writer and activist once said, "From an apolitical innocent I became a traumatized citizen."

She was fifteen when the Japanese bombed the U.S. naval base at Pearl Harbor. On February 19, 1942, President Franklin D. Roosevelt signed Executive Order 9066, calling for the evacuation of all persons of Japanese descent. [fill in the blank] and her family were sent to Gila, Arizona, to a camp in the desert. Two years later, she took an entrance exam to attend Mount Holyoke College in Massachusetts. Who is she?

Sunday, March 29, 2009

A Step From Heaven

A Step From Heaven
An Na
YA
Front Street Imprint
2001

A Step From Heaven was my first read by an author also new to me. I appreciate Na's writing style here because it gives the reader a sense of how a child processes her relationship with her family and her environment, and how she processes life as an immigrant. We experience the process of assimilation through the eyes of a child; we witness how she and her family learn a new language and how they adapt to American culture whose values and behaviors seem very different from their own. Na provides the reader with an intimate look at how limiting and frustrating a language barrier can be. I like how the author uses choice Korean words and phonetic spellings to illustrate how Young and her family hears American words.

The subtle changes in Young Ju's voice and the impressions she relates as she matures are believable. All of these elements create a character who is endearing and strike me as authentic. And while the story encompasses a great deal of time, I think Na does an admirable job. I'm looking forward to reading The Fold.

Color Online Quiz: Literature & Women's Studies

Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #20

Name the author and the title of one of her works. Provide link if possible.

"[She] was born in Parmele, North Carolina, on May 17, 1929. The second oldest of five children, she moved, as an infant, with her family to Washington, D.C. She studied piano as a child and teenager. She loved music, movies, and books. As a young wife and mother in her early twenties, while working as a clerk-typist at the U. S. Patent Office, [fill in] began a search for satisfying work. She found it in writing...

After several years of study and rejections from publishers, [fill in] had her first poem published in the Hartford Times in 1962. Her first book was published in 1972. She is now the author of more than 40 books for children -- poetry, biography, picture books and older fiction. She says her mission is twofold: (1) to contribute to the development of a large body of African American literature for children and (2) to continue to fill her life with the joy of creating with words."



New Crayons

Light week this week. I haven't ordered from paperbackswap.com lately and a book I ordered from frugalreader.com appears to be lost. The sender contacted me asking if I received it, which I sadly said no. I really wanted this book, The Rose That Grew from Concrete by Tupac Shakur. We can't seem to keep it in the library so I was really looking forward to getting this. If you'd like to participate in NC, leave us a link in the comments.

I tried to get several books from the library, mostly books I read about at The Happy Nappy Book Seller, but my branch doesn't have them so I'm going to request they buy them. The library director is really nice and she told me that if I had requests to let her know. What I did get:

My Life As A Rhombus by Varian Johnson. Read Andromeda's review at a wrung sponge. I've been looking forward to this and my library did purchase it at my request.


North Korea Kidnapped My Daughter by Sakie Yokota. Read Steph's mailbox post and told her it sounded it interesting. She sent it to me on swap. Mrs. Yokota vividly recounts the horrifying panic when Megumi went missing and the entire ordeal of her daughter’s absence. In 2002, North Korea released five of the victims, claiming the other eight were dead; however, it refused to provide legitimate evidence to support these claims. After four years of deliberations in Japan, Sakie Yokota attended the first U.S. Congressional hearing on the abductions and asked America for help.

Shortie Like Mine by Ni-Ni Simone. Edi at Crazy Quilts sent this to me. I think our girls will check this out.

Sixteen year-old, Seven McKnight may be the thickest one in her clique, but she is fierce, fly and fabulous. She has the biggest crush on the school's star basketball player, Josiah Whitaker, who is fine as wine. The only problem is he is with her girl, Deeyah. When Deeyah plays Josiah and his worst enemy against each other, it leaves Seven thinking it is time to make her move.

Saturday, March 28, 2009

Historical Fiction

I recently read a post that suggested maybe we don't feature enough books often enough, so I'm going address that in a number of ways. One way will be cross-posting about books I've read but I have written full reviews for. Frankly, with a goal of 100 reads this year, working, writing for two blogs and meeting with CO members, it's not possible to review every book, but I can share what I've been reading. This morning, I'm sharing my response to one of Weekly Geeks' assignment which was to discuss historical fiction. Find more here.

Starting today, book titles will be linked to Shelfari when reviews are available there. Doing this will give you access to not only reviews but to members who've read the book and where you might find group discussions.

Is there a particular era that you love reading about? Tell us about it--give us a book list, if you'd like. Include pictures or some fun facts from that time period, maybe link to a website that focuses on that time. Educate us.

I prefer recent history say the last hundred years or so. I’ve mentioned before that I love multicultural literature and historical fiction provides one of the best ways to learn about another culture and its history. Favorite books of this type include:

In The Time of the Butterflies by Julia Alvarez. This is about the Mirabel sisters' who fought against Trujillo dictatorship in the Dominican Republic. Read a Color Online reader's review here.

The Farming of Bones by Edwidge Danticat. This is the same country, but told from the point of view of Haitian migrant workers. It looks at the relationship between the ruling class and the sugar cane and other Haitian laborers.

A Wish After Midnight
by Zetta Elliott. 15-year-old Genna is transported to 1863 Brooklyn during the Civil War and specifically the New York Draft riots.

Those Bones Are Not My Child
by Toni Cade Bambara. This is a fictional account of a mother whose child goes missing in Atlanta during the rash of real kidnappings during the 1979-81. The book is chock full of other recent history like the Vietnam War.


The Rock and The River by Kekla Magoon. This coming-of-age story is about two brothers who make life-changing decisions during the height of Civil Rights Movement.

A member of your book group, Ashley, mentions that she almost never reads Historical Fiction because it can be so boring. It's your turn to pick the book for next month and you feel it's your duty to prove her wrong. What book do you pick?

I’d share links to all of the books above and suggest she choose.


Friday, March 27, 2009

Fertile Ground

watering wild seeds
between the concrete they grow
black-eyed susans sing









This is my vision and dedication for the young women I serve. Find more selections here.

Wednesday, March 25, 2009

Celebrating Women's History Month

Born June 6, 1939
Bennettsville, South Carolina
Attorney, social activist, founder and leader of the Children's Defense Fund

Investing in [children] is not a national luxury or a national choice. It's a national necessity.
~Marian Wright Edelman



Marian Wright Edelman Institute
link

Tuesday, March 24, 2009

New Crayons

Couple of weeks ago, I introduced My New Crayons. Every Sunday(yes, I'm late this week), I'll share what books I acquired for the week. Feel free to comment. If you'd like to share your what received for the week, create a post on your blog on Sunday or close to it, and leave us a link in the comment section. Check here to see what others have added to their box of Crayolas.

From Zetta:

Pemba's Song by Marilyn Nelson and Tonya Hegiman. I know Ms. Nelson's poetry and her sonnets are amazing. I'm looking forward to this spin on paranormal fiction. Pemba knows she's not crazy. But who is that looking out at her through her mirror's eye? And why is the apparition calling her "friend"? Her real friends are back home in Brooklyn.

The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing by M.T. Anderson. In this fascinating and eye-opening Revolution-era novel, Octavian, a black youth raised in a Boston household of radical philosophers, is given an excellent classical education. He and his mother, an African princess, are kept isolated on the estate, and only as he grows older does he realize that while he is well dressed and well fed, he is indeed a captive being used by his guardians as part of an experiment to determine the intellectual acuity of Africans

Life of Pi by by Yann Martel and The Kite Runner by by Khaled Hosseini. Both of these have been in my tbr forever. One day. I did read A Thousand Splendid Suns. Loved it.

From Sweet Afton:

Parable of the Sower by Octavia E. Butler. Incredible. Read both Parables. POS will evoke a lot of emotion. Be prepared not to read anything for a few days after this. hopeful tale set in a dystopian future United States of walled cities, disease, fires, and madness. Lauren Olamina is an 18-year-old woman with hyperempathy syndrome--if she sees another in pain, she feels their pain as acutely as if it were real.

Symptomatic by Danzy Senna. A young biracial woman's postcollege year in New York proves psychologically challenging in Senna's muddled second novel. The unnamed narrator has landed a prestigious fellowship and a job as a reporter at a big New York magazine, not to mention a "strange lovely" new boyfriend who moves her into his apartment faster than she can say "nice place.

The Darkest Child by Delores Phillips.Phillips's searing debut reveals the poverty, injustices and cruelties that one black family suffers—some of this at the hands of its matriarch—in a 1958 backwater Georgia town. Thirteen-year-old Tangy Mae Quinn loves her mother, Rozelle, but knows there's "something wrong" with her—which, as it soon becomes clear, is an extreme understatement.

Carlene Brice sent us a copy of her book, Orange, Mint and Honey. We're hoping to do an interview soon. African-American Shay Dixon, a burnt-out grad student, has a visitation/fantasy/fever dream featuring Nina Simone, the high priestess of soul, who counsels Shay to go home. To do that, she must face Nona, the drunken failure of a mother she's not spoken to in seven years and blames for a harrowing childhood that left her emotionally scarred.

Friday, March 20, 2009

Part 2: A Wish After Midnight


my love is the sun
and you are the a blue lotus
turning towards me*

During Part 1, we focused on Zetta's current work, A Wish After Midnight. In Part 2, I askedthe writer to talk about the work after writing a novel, promoting it, interacting with the various branches in the publishing industry, the lack of diversity in the marketplace and majority readers' response to works by people of color.

BES: You've done workshops with children and since publishing Bird, you've had more contact with educators and librarians. I understand you're going to be working with young adults in the near future? Can you tell us more about that?

ZE: I’m learning to make the necessary adjustments with my writing workshops. Sometimes teachers just want a reading of the book, but even that needs to be age-specific. BIRD has mature content, and the illustrations are so rich—it takes a while to really process everything that’s going on in the story. But children love to peel back the layers, to speculate on a character’s emotions or motivations, and to interpret the use of light in Shadra Strickland’s amazing images. I absolutely love to teach, and hadn’t worked with children in quite a while, so it’s refreshing to hear their perspectives.

For AWAM, I have some workshops lined up for the next month, and I’ll need to tailor those for an older, teenage audience. I was surprised when visiting an elementary school at the number of questions the children had written down. I came in with my own agenda and all kinds of fun writing activities, but the kids really just wanted to talk. So I’m learning to make space for that. I suspect that with AWAM, there will also be a number of questions the students want answered. I believe in creating narrative possibility in my writing, and that means NOT always spelling things out…I think the point of literature is to leave gaps that the imagination of the reader can fill.

I have a character development activity that I’m eager to try out on teen readers. I find that when I start to write a story, I’m most dependent on the VOICE of my characters. I often begin by writing down one statement, or a fragment of conversation. The characters speak, and reveal themselves to me in that way, and then I become a mimic of sorts—I learn their speech patterns and “write out loud” so the story’s told in a way that’s consistent with their point of view. In all of my workshops I want readers to embrace possibility: what if? Be curious, be as persistent as a two-year old! Keep pushing further—what if, what if, what if?

BES: So you've written plays, a memoir, poetry, a children's book, a young adult novel and your academic papers. Each of these veins is a different kind of writing. How did you approach the YA novel? Among YA authors who impresses you and why? What are some of your favorite works?

ZE: Unfortunately, I don’t read a lot of YA fiction, so it would be hard for me to weigh in on today’s authors. Growing up I loved Mildred D. Taylor, and I think that kind of historical fiction really appeals to me; I recently read The Astonishing Life of Octavian Nothing, and was very impressed. I like sophisticated writing and complicated characters, and I do find that some YA fiction is “lite,” but you never know if that’s due to the author’s intent, their limitations, or some editor’s intervention.

I don’t have a particular approach when it comes to writing in different genres; I wait for the voice, and then everything else tends to come quite quickly, organically almost. When I find myself forcing a story, I stop. I started Judah’s Tale as soon as AWAM was done, and got about a third of it done, but then needed to stop. I’m hoping that when I go back to it this summer, things will flow naturally.

BE: Bird is a successful, award winning book published through a traditional publishing house, but AWAM is self-published. Why? In hindsight, was self-publishing the right move at this time? Are you still looking for a publisher to pick up your YA novel?

ZE: I do think it was the right move for me, and no, I’m not looking for a traditional publisher. Even if I found one who liked my book, they’d probably still say, “We’ll publish it in 2011.” Their turnaround time is just awful, and nowhere near the pace of the 21st century. If you want to listen to a song, you go online and buy it—NOW. Same thing with videos or films—it’s almost instant. I don’t see why books should be rationed out to readers every three or four years. Maybe if I have some critical success with my books, it might make some editor somewhere think twice the next time s/he shoves a black-authored manuscript into the slush pile…

The publishing industry isn’t easy to understand or to penetrate. I wrote BIRD in 2002 and it wasn’t published until 2008. BIRD has won numerous awards, and I still can’t get an agent and can’t get my stories into editors’ hands. I finished writing AWAM in 2003, and spent 5 years sending it out to publishers and editors and agents—and got nothing but rejection letters. Many publishers won’t even look at a manuscript unless an agent presents it to them. So if you can’t get an agent, you have no access to those publishers. A few editors read sample chapters and then asked for the entire manuscript, but they all said no in the end. One Canadian publisher said, “We love the book, but we’re a small press and don’t have the resources to market it in the US.” Another Canadian press said they loved the contemporary part of the novel (the first third), but weren’t interested in Genna once she traveled back in time. Ultimately, I decided to self-publish because I met a very wise artist who told me I lacked ambition. And when I really thought about what she said, I realized that my ambition is simply different than other writers’. I’m not desperate. I’m not willing to do “whatever it takes” to see my book in Barnes & Noble.

I don’t feel the need to win awards, or aim for the bestseller list. What I truly want is for young readers to have access to this story. If I can get it into classrooms (which is starting to happen now!) and the public library system, I’ll be satisfied. By self-publishing AWAM, I gave myself permission to follow my own ambition. I don’t have to “play the game” anymore. I respect myself, I respect my work, and I respect my readers. I’m making connections with bloggers, and librarians, and educators, and THEY are the ones getting the word out about my novel. We think we have to wait for the gatekeepers of the arts industries to tell us what to read, and listen to, and watch on screen. But the truth is, technology is transforming the way art circulates. I can write a story today and publish it tomorrow. I don’t have to wait 6 years. YOU, the reader, don’t have to wait six years.

BES: YA is not what it was when I was a young adult. The genre is far more diverse in terms of themes, styles and the number of writers, but in terms of writers of color, there is a gap. Recently, I read about a YA conference in NYC. I was struck by how few writers of color are on the roster. And this event is held in New York, in my mind the most diverse city in the country. I know you aware of the conference, what was your reaction when you saw the event being promoted?

ZE: I certainly wasn’t surprised, but I also wasn’t sure I had my facts straight. It’s hard to critique a community when you’re not on the inside, and I still don’t know a lot of YA authors. When I saw the list, I didn’t recognize many of the authors, but didn’t want to assume that meant they were all white. When others who are better read confirmed that the list of participating authors wasn’t racially balanced, then I started thinking of a way to respond. I think the people who plan these events simply don’t see the absence of people of color as a problem. So they need an incentive to change the way they think, and I don’t know what that incentive could be.

The Cooperative Children’s Book Center keeps statistics on children’s books—in 2007, less than 3% of all books published for children were written by black people. I don’t know if any other industry in the US is as homogeneous as the world of publishing. There’s very little diversity among editors, and a corresponding lack of diversity in published books. Coincidence? I don’t think so. Minority groups have always struggled to get their stories out into the world. Black writers have been self-publishing and starting their own presses—out of necessity—for hundreds of years.

Sometimes, when you’re part of a minority group and you’re trying to effect change, you have to accept that your greatest challenge isn’t direct opposition—it’s apathy. Most people in the majority really just don’t care. You either have to find a way to MAKE them care, or you accept that that’s simply an arena where you aren’t welcome. I commented on a blog that advertised the event—you did, too—and the follow-up comments completely ignored our point about diversity. They just continued to talk around us! You can’t have a conversation with people who aren’t going to acknowledge the elephant in the room. As I said before, members of the majority group have to work amongst themselves on this issue of privilege. I’m content to exist in my own parallel universe for now.

BES: Okay, so the issue of privilege aside, what issues do writers of color have to address regarding multicultural literature?

ZE: To be honest, I don’t think about that very much. I think white privilege has created distortions in the minds of many white people. Some feel they don’t need to know anything about anyone who’s not like them. People of color and other minority group members don’t have that luxury—we could lose our lives if we don’t understand how the dominant group functions. So we know their culture better than they know ours—for hundreds of years, it was a matter of survival.

Now, people are free to make lots of different choices when it comes to what they read, wear, eat, listen to in terms of music…I think reaching white readers isn’t necessarily my job. There’s a lot of work that white people have to do amongst themselves in order to dismantle white privilege. I’ll help anyone who asks, but I’m not going to devote time and energy to “converting” white readers to black literature. I teach African American literature, and most of my students are white. Once they start reading, they usually KEEP reading. But I didn’t drag them into my classroom—they chose to take my course. I’m only interested in meeting people halfway.

BES: I hear you. My hope is that readers at Color Online will discover writers they might not have been exposed to, but the reader has to be interested in broadening their reading habits first.

I read a lot of YA. It's not often I find a work geared towards this audience that challenges young people to critically examine the connections between our past and our current times. Not in the dynamic way AWAM does. I think a lot of readers will welcome that opportunity to discuss the issues you raise in A Wish After Midnight. Please keep us posted how well the novel is doing and keep us informed about your upcoming work. Closing thoughts?

ZE: I think we're in a moment right now that's filled with fear *and* opportunity. I know I'm nervous about the future, but I'm also pretty excited. I think we've got to find new ways of being, new ways of connecting with one another and expressing ourselves. I'm willing to try something new, and I hope other folks out there feel the same. It's time for change!

BES: Thanks for taking time to talk with me, Zetta.

Readers, it's not too late to ask Zetta a question. Leave a comment or question here, and you'll earn an opportunity to win a signed copy of A Wish After Midnight. Deadline is March 25th.

*from A Wish After Midnight

A Wish After Midnight

Zetta Elliott currently teaches at Mount Holyoke College. She's promoting her first YA novel, A Wish After Midnight following the successful publication of her award winning, children's book, Bird. I met Zetta at Jacketflap.com not long ago though it feels like we've been friends for years. When she told me about AWAM, I'd ask for a copy for our library, and asked if she'd do an interview. Zetta is a talented writer and impassioned woman who cares about her community, the arts and her work with youth.

Black-Eyed Susan: Tell our readers a little about yourself and your writing experience.

Zetta Elliott: I decided to become a writer when I was about 15 years old. I had an English teacher, Mrs. Vichert, and after reading my assignments for two years she said, “If you want to be a writer, you will be.” She said it so simply, without any doubt, that I believed her! I started my first novel that summer, I think, and it was just awful…I never finished it, but I kept on reading and mostly expressed myself in the papers I wrote for school. During my last year of college, I was introduced to Toni Morrison and Jamaica Kincaid, and their writing changed the course of my life. Once I discovered the tradition of black women writers, I knew where I belonged. I took a year off while I was in graduate school and wrote my first novel, One Eye Open, in 1999. Then I moved on to writing for children…then to playwriting…then I wrote a memoir. Occasionally I write poetry. Now I’m back to writing for children, but I also have a play underway. I have to do some academic writing for my job (I’m a professor), but I’m thinking about moving into film…

BES: In the trailer you share that you wrote AWAM because you didn't see girls like Genna in other books. Expound on this.

ZE: I read constantly as a child. My parents were divorced, things at home weren’t great, and my mother basically was either at work or immersed in a book. So I followed her lead. Because Canada (where I’m from) is a former British colony, I read a lot of British literature—as a teen I read Charles Dickens, the Bronte sisters, Jane Austen, George Eliot. And even before then, I read novels by Frances Hodgson Burnett—A Little Princess, The Secret Garden, Little Lord Fauntleroy, etc. So my imagination was definitely steeped in that Victorian storytelling tradition, plus I loved the King Arthur legends—I remember writing my senior thesis in high school on The Mists of Avalon. Basically, I wanted to disappear, and the best way to do that was to read a book full of people who were nothing like me. The trouble is, after a while you start to reproduce that invisibility when telling your own stories. It becomes difficult to dream about amazing things happening to people who look like you! So I consciously began to work against that. I wanted children to know that magical things could happen to them even if they didn’t live in a castle somewhere in England—magical things can happen to anyone anywhere. I live near the Brooklyn Botanic Garden, and there’s a massive tree there that I included in the trailer; when I was young, I read a book about two white kids who went to a park after a storm and found an old tree that had been split in two by lightening—Merlin was inside! That image has stayed with me a long time…and so when I look at the world of the city, I see possibilities that I first dreamt about as a child.

BES: Those of us who are Octavia E. Butler fans make an immediate connection with the time travel device and specifically Genna returning to the South during the Civil War. Did you have any concern that these connections would unduly impact these readers' expectations and standards?

ZE: I knew I couldn’t write anything as good as Kindred, but I loved that book so much that it became the model for AWAM. Butler sends Dana back to the antebellum period, and my character, Genna, returns to the city of Brooklyn long after slavery has been abolished in New York State. She’s legally free, but I wanted to contrast the 19th and 21st centuries in order to complicate the notion of FREEDOM and PROGRESS. I wrote AWAM before President Obama was elected, but I still urge my students to consider how that milestone actually transforms race relations in this country. What has actually changed between the races? Butler was interested in exposing just what it took to make a slave. Dana thinks she’s sophisticated, independent—a “liberated woman.” But she’s reduced to someone vulnerable and desperate when she goes back in time. I wanted my character to be tested in a similar way. Genna fights against her mother’s hatred of whites, and those who would reduce her to “just another girl on the block.” She has dreams, plans, ambition, yet she yearns to belong somewhere, to be valued and admired. Her return to the 19th century reveals just how strong Genna really is, and how she’s able to build community by reaching out to those around her. She wanted to escape her difficult life in Brooklyn 2001, but her return to the past makes her question the very idea of “escape”—how DO you become free? By letting go, or holding on? Is it harder to start over in a new place, or to stay put and work for change?

BES: I was struck by the date Genna returns home. This girl just can't get a break. Why September 10, 2001?

ZE: Well, again—I’m trying to interrogate the idea of progress. She left one era and returned to her own only to find NYC shaken by terror once more. If we don’t learn from the past, we’re destined to repeat it, and a lot of Americans unfortunately seem to believe that history began on 9/11. It didn’t—history took a sharp turn that day, but Americans have dealt with terrorism for hundreds of years. Domestic terrorism. I begin AWAM with the execution of Timothy McVeigh; Genna understands that when people are unhappy, they sometimes act out violently. For her, terrorism isn’t about race as much as it’s about rage and powerlessness. In the NYC Draft Riots, white mobs murder and assault blacks AND whites. And there were many brave whites who stood up to the mobs in order to help the victims of the violence. But after 9/11, terrorism became linked to race—a terrorist was represented as someone brown-skinned, a Muslim, a “foreigner.” There was this single narrow profile, and people forgot all about the KKK and lynch mobs and race riots. Many Americans could only see themselves as victims, which is understandable after such a traumatic event. But there’s history that extends before 9/11, and I wanted to give Genna a chance to apply what she learned in 1863.

BES: Let's talk about Judah. While Genna is unhappy about a lot of things in her life, she does meet someone who accepts her for who she is. Judah helps Genna to take another look at herself. She starts asking more questions about the world and how she fits in it. Physically, she embraces her beauty and stops comparing herself to others. This was in part because of Judah. Having someone accept you for who you are is powerful. Like Genna, Judah is different. He has his own ideas and goals. Can you talk about the contrast between Judah and Genna. What does he represent in this novel?

ZE: I’ve actually been surprised by the number of people who read the novel and tell me they prefer Paul to Judah! But I suppose I shouldn’t be surprised, really, since I deliberately made Judah flawed and difficult to embrace at times. He does show Genna her own beauty, but it’s in keeping with HIS particular aesthetic…in a way, Judah feels he’s revealing Genna to herself and to the world, but he’s also trying to shape her. Unconditional love is extremely hard to come by, and in any relationship, it’s a challenge trying to negotiate difference. Judah doesn’t identify as American; that’s an important difference, and one that threatens to drive a wedge between them in the 19th and 21st centuries. He isn’t bound to Brooklyn, or the US; he’s an immigrant and a practicing Rastafarian, and so he believes his destiny is to return to Africa. Genna wants to be hybrid, she doesn’t want to have to choose between one future or identity over another. But she also loves Judah and wants to stay with him. Everyone in a loving relationship has to ask himself or herself: how much am I willing to give up in order to be with this person? Paul serves as an alternative for Genna; he admires her feisty spirit, and enjoys engaging her in debate even when they have differing viewpoints. I was once in a relationship with a man who identified as “Afrikan-centered,” and every time I questioned his values or practices, he’d shut down the conversation by saying, “Well, you wouldn’t understand: you’re not Afrikan-centered.” I lost so much respect for him, and yet still felt he was a good person—and he was still attractive in other ways. Judah is like that man in some ways—clinging to beliefs out of fear, refusing to even consider other ways of thinking. Genna is bound to Judah not only by love, but by their shared experience going back in time. Yet because they were separated during the journey, they’ve lost a chunk of time in which both characters suffered deeply. I think Genna feels she owes something to Judah, and that’s dangerous. Can a teenage girl follow her heart and her dreams if she binds herself to another person? Again—how does one become truly FREE?

BES: What's in store for Judah and Genna?

ZE: Judah’s Tale, the sequel to AWAM, fills us in on the horrific experience Judah had upon reaching Brooklyn circa 1863. He was captured by blackbirders and sold back into slavery—shipped to the deep South, and sold to a slave breaker after running away from his first owner. As Judah confesses in AWAM, he had to kill a man in order to secure his own freedom, and that act haunts him as he tries to build a future in the past. He’s still determined to get to Africa, and when he loses Genna at the end of AWAM, there’s even less to keep him in Brooklyn. So the sequel is about Genna’s quest to get back to Judah, her efforts to find magic—a portal between the two worlds. Judah meanwhile is living in Weeksville, connecting with the local Native Americans and with blacks who believe their future lies in Liberia. Will Judah wait for Genna? Will she find her way back to him? All that’s yet to be determined! I expect to finish the sequel this summer, so it should be available by September.

BES: I want to give our readers a chance to ask you some questions, plus we have part 2 tomorrow, but before I let you go, one last question. Let’s talk about your writing process. What are some of the principles or ideas that guide your work? Do you have any writing rituals?

ZE: I don’t have any rituals, and I don’t have a writing routine. I write all the time—first thing every morning I’m on the computer, sending emails, blogging—so I’m always working with words. But I tend to write in spurts, so a lot of the time in between is spent dreaming. Then, when the story’s ready to emerge, everything else stops and I focus only on getting the ideas and characters onto the page. I started a new story recently, and in two days wrote about 12 pages. Then I stopped. I wanted to keep writing, but the urgency was gone, so I stopped. But you have to trust that you’ll go back to work when you’re ready. It had been months since I wrote any new fiction, so I was thrilled to be “back in the saddle” again.

BES: Thanks, Zetta. Looking forward to hearing from our readers.
Readers, ask Zetta about AWAM or any other question you'd like her to answer. Each question or comment earns you an entry for a signed copy of A Wish After Midnight. 3 winners will be randomly chosen after March 25th. Read Part 2 of our interview at Color Online, Saturday.

Poetry Friday

two deer ease their thirst
oblivious to the train
and my own delight




republished with permission from Zetta Elliott at Fledgling
See current interview with the author
Read more Poetry Friday entries here.

Wednesday, March 18, 2009

Celebrating Women's History Month

Ellen Stewart
November 7, 1918
Alexandria, Louisana

...in [Septermber, 1965] sixteen people sailed off with 22 plays. We slept in barns and fields, where we could. We played for room and board. The critics wrote that they didn’t know what we were writing about or what we were talking about, that we could not act, but they liked us. By my going, I’m told, we started the whole circuit of avante-garde.

From I Dream A World. To learn more about Ms. Stewart:

Tuesday, March 17, 2009

Interview

Okay, this is awkward, but I do like the opportunity to promote folks so I'm sharing this with you. I've been interviewed at Electronic Village.

A Wish After Midnight Contest



Many of you may remember me promoting Zetta Elliott's book, A Wish After Midnight. Well, it's now available at Amazon! Buy one and win one by linking to this announcement about my upcoming interview with Zetta later this week. Link to this promotion, and your name will be entered in a drawing to win a signed copy. Come back and read the interview, and leave a question or comment, and you'll earn a second chance to win. Help me get this incredible read into the hands of young people, old people, educators and on library shelves and in classrooms. Enjoy the video and check out Edi's review at Crazy Quilts.

Interview will be published Friday, March 20th.

Post your link here in the comment section. To be eligible to win, you must provide me with contact information. You can write me privately if you don't want your addy posted here. Contest for US residents only. 3 winners will be randomly chosen from entries here and Black-Eyed Susan's. Deadline for entries is March 25th.

Monday, March 16, 2009

Color Online Quiz: Literature & Women's Studies

Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #19

She was born January 13, 1940 in Binghampton, New York.
activist, peace advocate, political columnist

As you open up and out to the world, as you grow in awareness and empathy for human beings in nations near and far, you may see more acutely, or perhaps anew, the condition of those in your own backyard. This revelation, no matter how great or small, should not be an end in itself. It should…serve as a catalyst to your becoming an agent of change. It should bring to your remembrance the second part of the slogan from the Women’s Conference in Nairobi: the imperative to ‘act locally.’

Who is she?

Sunday, March 15, 2009

Book Review

Patternmaster
Octavia Butler
1995

This was the first book of the Seed to Harvest quartet by publication date -- and the last one by internal chronology. I read it first for two reasons. One, unless I get a strong indication otherwise, I tend to read things by publishing order -- partly because I like to see the author develop, but also partly because there's more a guarantee that they make sense in that order, because they were presumably written to make sense to people who were reading them as they came out. (Unless they were very bad books indeed, but I don't expect that from Butler.) Two, because my general inclination was reinforced by other people, who said that they read better in publication order. And having read all four books, I think they were right, and I too would recommend that you read them in publication order rather than internal chronology.

I'm going to try to refer to each one without spoilers for the others, and then I'll post about all four of the books considered as a whole, because they stand along perfectly well but gain a lot of richness and depth when you consider them in context.

So: Patternmaster.

Patternmaster is set in... I can't actually tell how far in the future, because the changes to our world are so dramatic that it could be a hundred years or five hundred. (Indeed, I initially thought that it was set on another planet, the world was so different than the one I know.) Patternmaster is set in a future in which the human species has split into two... I was going to say "factions," but really, they're actually two new, separate species: the clayarks, people mutated by an alien microorganism, who are strong and tough and fast and make and use weapons and other technologies; and the patternists, who are psionicists of varying stripes, who use mental powers (including telepathy, telekinesis, healing/biomanipulation, and the ability to store memories in objects) instead of engineering as we know it. "Normal" humans -- people like you or me -- also exist; they're called "mutes" and are servants of the patternists. (There are no normal humans among the clayarks, because the clayark disease is extremely infectious.)

As you could probably guess from the title, Patternmaster is from the point of view of a patternist, Teray, who falls afoul of the strict rules of his traditional society and the political maneuvering therein, and becomes an "outsider" (essentially, a slave) to Coransee, an extremely powerful (politically and psionically) master of a House. The book is about his struggle to reassert his independence, and it's about the way he allies with an Independent -- a patternist who isn't subject to any House master, Amber. Amber is powerful, intelligent, and tough -- she's a healer, but she subverts the 'woman healer' stereotype by also being an extremely effective killer -- and, indeed, I think she's the strongest character in the book. The developing relationship between Teray and Amber serves as both the heart and the backbone of Patternmaster

Besides Amber, the most interesting thing about this book for me was the worldbuilding and the society, which is dystopian and yet fascinating, even for me (I'm picky about dystopian/post-apocalyptic futures). I find the nature of the 'disaster' really interesting: not one but two radical changes to humanity. (Indeed, I find it particularly cool that Butler put both the clayarks and the patternists in this world -- either idea could have spawned a series, but both together creates a richness and sense of conflict that would be difficult to achieve otherwise. The patternists and the clayarks both are extremely potent, but neither is quite strong enough to get the upper hand over the other -- and yet their very natures makes it impossible for them to stop fighting.) We see only glimpses of clayark society, because the protagonists see (indeed, for their own self-preservation, kind of have to see) the clayarks as inherently inimical, kill-or-be-killed. But patternist society is extremely interesting in its own right. Patternists live in Houses, run by powerful Masters, for their own protection against the clayarks. Within the house, there's a heriarchy: the Master on top, his apprentices beneath him, outsiders (slaves, but with psionic powers) beneath them, and mutes beneath them. (The position of women is more unclear to me: it appears that patternist women, in Houses with male Masters, are wives of varying degree of status -- it's not clear whether there are any female apprentices or outsiders who are not wives. It's also not totally clear what the status of men and women are in Houses run by women, which definitely exist.)

And then there's the Pattern, a really fascinating look at the way a telepathic society would exit. All patternists are linked together by the Pattern, although for the most part, only fellow House members are closely aware of one another. People who are sympatico, who are compatible in personality and metal attitude, are said to be close together in the Pattern, something that they can feel immediately and instinctively. It's a world in which you can tell immediately whether you're likely to get along with someone -- and that immediate awareness is acknowledged, and used.

As far as recommendations go: Patternmaster is exceptional science fiction. It's not as good as the books in the series that would follow it, which in my opinion get better and better, but it's a good entry point to the series. (And I do recommend that you use it as the entry point: working in internal-chronology order rather than publication order would, in my opinion, be a mistake.)

Republished with permission.
To read more reviews by Cora Anderson visit her here

Friday, March 13, 2009

Fertile Ground

Ark
Camille T. Dungy


I will enter you as hope enters me,
through blinding liquid, light of rain, and I
will stay inside until you send me out;
I will stay inside until you ground me.
we cannot outrun the rain. So many
summers I have tried. So many summers.
But when the rumble calls after the spark
there can be no escape. No outstripping
the drench soak, the wet sheath, the water caul.
This is more than you want to hear. Much more
than I want to tell you. Tabernacle
transporting my life from the desert, you,
the faith I am born and reborn into,
you rescuer, deliverer of rain.


from What to Eat, What to Drink, What to Leave for Poison.

Wednesday, March 11, 2009

Book Review

The Skin Between Us
Kym Regusa
memoir
224 pages
W.W. Norton

This memoir is like a good Italian meal. The passages are replete with flavors and textures that make you want to linger. Ms. Regusa is the daughter of an African American mother and an Italian American father. She is a visual artist whose childhood filled with books and museums deftly affect her ability to tell her tale. I found myself slowing down to take in passages; I wanted to savor them. A photographer and filmmaker, Ms. Regusa's rendering is a combination of watching a documentary and feeling full from partaking in an extended meal. This is not a feel-good book. The tension, anger, abandonment, and racism addressed here is tangible. Still there is enough of the poetic and hopeful to keep the reader going.

While this review is brief, I hope you can sense how satisfying this read is. I read this last year and even now, I feel full and content.

Potpourri: Literature & Women's Studies

Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #18

Name a woman of color filmmaker. Provide title of one work and link to information about the director. One entry submitted for each answer provided.

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Black-Eyed Susan's

Black-Eyed Susan's: Confession Tuesday & WG

Women's History Month is a big deal to me so is feminism. Some of my sisterfriends don't like the labels feminist or black. I do. These words connote different things so if you embrace the labels, the onus is on you to define them and to demonstrate what they mean. Don't let others define you.

"One of the sad commentaries on the way women are viewed in our society is that we have to fit one category. I have never felt that I had to be in one category." ~Faye Wattleton

Monday, March 9, 2009

Shades of Love

The Meaning of Consuelo
Judith Ortiz Cofer
YA
2003
Beacon Press

Consuelo is a Puerto Rican teen living in San Juan in the 50s. The island is undergoing major culture changes with the influx of American enterprise. Consuelo's
coming-of-age encapsulates the awkwardness, doubt, disappointment and personl dilemma we all have experienced during our formative years. In this ya novel, Cofer weaves the personal transformations of multiple characters effortlessly. The text is sprinkled with Spanish that isn't difficult to understand.

Shades of Love
Leave a comment or send us a review. If we publish your review, your name will be entered in a monthly drawing to win a book from our Prize Bucket. If you want us to feature a book, send us your recommendation. Send recommendations, reviews and questions to cora_litgroup@yahoo.com

Sunday, March 8, 2009

New Crayons

Every Sunday, I'll share what books I acquired for the week. Okay, the following are not crayons, but I am as excited about new books as I was about new crayons when I was five. Feel free to comment. If you'd like to share your what received for the week, create a post on your blog on Sunday or close to it, and leave us a link in the comment section. Check here to see what others have added to their box of crayolas.

The Skin I'm In By Sharon Flake. Can't keep enough of these in the library. This undoubtly will become a classic in YA literature.

Shanghai Messenger by Andrea Chenge. This will be shelved at our library.
In this picture book for older children, 11-year-old Xiao Mei, the child of an American father and a Chinese mother, is persuaded by Grandma Nai Nai in America to take up the invitation from Uncle Hai Tao to spend the summer in Shanghai. Cheng's free-verse story, illustrated with Young's small, expressive line-and-watercolor pictures, shows the child's initial doubts, the plane journey and the arrival, and the welcoming young cousins and adults...

A Cool Moonlight by Angela Johnson. This children's title was reviewed here recently by Alessandra. After reading her review I publicly pined for a copy. I gleefully did a happy dance when I opened this package.

Make Lemonade by Virginia Euwer Wolff, a book well-received by our readers. Saving this copy when the current one needs to be replaced. LaVaughn has plans to go to college. What she doesn't have is the money. To earn money, she takes a job babysitting for a teen mom. Together, both girls struggle to make their lives better.

Bird by Zetta Elliot, an award winning book. Can't wait to share it with our younger visitors. Mehkai's nickname is Bird. Both Bird and his brother, Marcus are gifted artists. The story beautifully unfolds in both words and watercolor, gouache, charcoal and ink drawings. Through image and words the reader witnesses how Bird copes with the loss of his brother and grandfather. Bird uses art to heal.

Autobiography of My Dead Brother, a collaboration between fathter and son, author Walter Dean Myers and illustrator, Christopher Myers. Very excited to read this illustrated novel.

Saturday, March 7, 2009

International Women's Day

In celebration of International Women’s Day, the Department of State announces the recipients of the third annual Secretary of State’s Award for International Women of Courage. This is the only award within the Department of State that pays tribute to outstanding women leaders worldwide. It recognizes the courage and leadership shown as they struggle for social justice and human rights.

This year, the Secretary of State will pay tribute to honorees representing Afghanistan, Guatemala, Iraq, Malaysia, Niger, Russia, Uzbekistan, and Yemen. They are among over 80 exceptional women nominated by U.S. Embassies worldwide for their extraordinary work in advancing human rights. The women will be in Washington from March 8 – 12 for a program of meetings with government officials, NGOs and the media. The Office of International Visitors is partnering with the Office of International Women’s Issues on this project.

Go here to see complete list of recipients. Thanks Obama mamas.

Book Review

In the Time of the Butterflies
Julia Alvarez
352 pages
1995

Plume



In The Time of the Butterflies
by Julia Alvarez, though toted as a young adult novel, is full of adult themes, passion, depth, heartfelt loss and is shared in painstaking prose. The fictionalized version of a true political story, the Mariposa sisters as their countrymen called them, were the four Mirabel sisters, three of whom were ultimately martyred and murdered by the Trujillo regime, the 31-year dictator of Dominican Republic who ruled with untold violence, graft and deceit. The sisters only wanted justice, peace and liberty. The sacrifices they made and the courageous way they lived and fought for what they believed in will remain legendary. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is curious about the world, what makes a heroine, how a woman comes to define what she values, and what she is willing to sacrifice to make a better life for her children.

Reviewed by Sheila M.

Potpourri: Literature & Women's Studies

Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #17

She was born in Chicago in 1954. The only girl of seven children, she spent most of her time alone. She was shy and her family moved often. She said in college she was intimidated by her privileged classmates. She believed no one cared to what she had to say and no one listened to her even when she did speak.

It was not until this moment when I separated myself, when I considered myself truly distinct, that my writing acquired a voice.

She is the first Chicana to receive a major publishing contract for a work about Chicanas. Who is she?

Celebrating Women's History Month

March 07,1917-May 28, 2003

November 13, 1951: Janet Collins is the first black woman to dance at the Metropolitan Opera House, in Verdi’s Aida.

"I won the Donaldson Award for being the finest dancer on Broadway [in 1951 in Cole Porter's Our of this World.] I could see Broadway was a charade. I could see the fickleness- the happiness and the cruelty. At the top the air is very light but it is cruel. The top is not forever. Either you walk down or you agoing to be kicked down. I walked down." From I Dream A World.


Janet Collins
First Black Artist At The Met

Friday, March 6, 2009

Friday Fish Fry

At our online discussion forum, every Friday is Friday Fish Fry. It's the day we come together for a posting marathon. Members check out current posts and comment.

To facilate activity and interaction, we've added a query. We hope you'll respond. Today's query is inspired by recent discussion and podcast hosted by Tami at What Tami Said about the state of women of color bloggers. Our query:

How do woc bloggers cultivate and sustain community? As individual writers, what actions or activities do you participate in, in an effort to support sister bloggers? How do we define color, and are we doing enough to reach out to women of color across national, ethnic, racial and sexual orientation lines?

We want to hear from you. Don't be shy. As long as you stay on message and don't pounce the messenger, it's all good. I loathe censorship but if you take it there, well, let's just not go there.

Please take time to read previously published posts and comment. Thank you.

Fertile Ground

1973
Marilyn Hacker

"I'm pregnant," I wrote to her in delight
from London, thirty, married, in print. A fools-
cap sheet scrawled slantwise with one minuscule
sentence came back. "I hope your child is white."
I couldn't tear the pieces small enough.
I hoped she'd be black as the ace of spades,
though hybrid beige heredity had made
that as unlikely as the spun-gold stuff
sprouted after her neonatal fur.
I grudgingly acknowledged her "good hair,"
which wasn't, very, from my point of view.
"No tar brush left," her father's mother said.
"She's Jewish and she's white," from her cranked bed
mine smugly snapped.
She's Black. She is a Jew.

Thursday, March 5, 2009

Shades Of Love

Kira-Kira
Cynthia Kadohata
2006
Aladdin

In this YA story set in the 1950s an Asian-American family moves from Iowa to Georgia after their family business fails. Their struggles only multiply in Georgia. The parents work almost around the clock in hatcheries and over time they become shells of their former selves. The sisters, Lynn and Katie are extremely close. When the eldest, Lynn is diagnosed with Lymphoma, Katie cares for her. Accessible language, good pacing and characters the reader can empathize with. A good read.

Shades of Love
Leave a comment or send us a review. If we publish your review, your name will be entered in a monthly drawing to win a book from our Prize Bucket. If you want us to feature a book, send us your recommendation. Send recommendations, reviews and questions to cora_litgroup@yahoo.com

Potpourri: Literature & Women's History

Concepts such as truth, justice, and compassion cannot be dismissed as trite when these are often the only bulwarks which stand against ruthless power.

Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #16

From Prominent Women of the 20th century, she was born June 19, 1945 in Ragoon, Burma now Yangon Myamar. A recipient of the Nobel Peace Prize for her work as the leader of Myamar's pro-democracy movement, who is she?

Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Potpourri: Literature & Women's Studies

I am a descendant of the first Christians in the world, and Jesus Christ was born in my country, in my land. Bethlehem is a Palestinian town. So I will not accept this one-upmanship on Christianity. Nobody has the monopoly.


Answer the quiz and your name will be entered in a monthly drawing. Post your reply to the comment box. Post or send us your email addy to be eligible to win. Cool prizes, check out our Prize Bucket.

Quiz #15

Born 1946 in Ramallah. Youngest of five daughters. After completing her master's degree, she taught at Bir Zeit University in the West Bank. According to Prominent Women of the 20th Century (UXL), this political activist became the spokesperson and negotiator in the Palestinian cause for an Independent state.

Tuesday, March 3, 2009

Around The Globe: Poetry & Nonfiction

Fiction found here.

Triangular Road: A Memoir by Paule Marshall
My Forbidden Face: Growing Up Under the Taliban: A Young Woman's Story by
Latifa- Afghanistan (YA)
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou (autobiography)
Infidel by Ayaan Hirsi Ali (memoir)
Persepolis by Marjane Satrapi (memoir)
Our Dead Behind Us- Audre Lorde (Poetry)
I Put A Spell On You- Nina Simone (memoir)
My Wicked Ways-Sandra Cisneros (poetry)
When I Was Puerto Rican by Esmeralda Santiago (memoir)
Things I Have To Tell You- edited by Betsy Franco (poetry/essays)
The Cancer Journals by Audre Lorde- (essays)
Some of Us Did Not Die by June Jordan- (essays)
Never in a Hurry: Essays on People and Places by Naomi Shihab Nye
The Hemingses of Monticello by Annette Gordon-Reid
American Chica by Marie Arana (memoir)
Reading Lolita in Tehran by Azar Nafisi
Have a suggestions? Leave us a comment.