“Only a poet with an innocent heart can exorcise so much pain with so much beauty.”—Isabel Allende
A reprint of Sonia Sanchez’s award-winning collection, which contains some of her seminal work. Winner of the American Book Award.
Sonia Sanchez is a poet, activist, and scholar and one of the most important writers of the Black Arts Movement. She is the author of sixteen books and lives in Philadelphia.
Sonia Sanchez was born Wilsonia Benita Driver on September 9, 1934, in Birmingham, Alabama. After her mother died in childbirth a year later, Sanchez lived with her paternal grandmother and other relatives for several years. In 1943, she moved to Harlem with her sister to live with their father and his third wife.
She earned a B.A. in political science from Hunter College in 1955. She also did postgraduate work at New York University and studied poetry with Louise Bogan. Sanchez formed a writers' workshop in Greenwich Village, attended by such poets as Amiri Baraka (LeRoi Jones), Haki R. Madhubuti (Don L. Lee), and Larry Neal. Along with Madhubuti, Nikki Giovanni, and Etheridge Knight, she formed the "Broadside Quartet" of young poets, introduced and promoted by Dudley Randall.
plant yourself in the eyes of the children who have died carving out their own childhood. plant yourself in the dreams of the people scattered by morning bullets. let there be everywhere our talk. let there be everywhere our eyes. let there be everywhere our thoughts. let there be everywhere our love. let there be everywhere our actions. breathing hope and victory into their unspoken questions summoning the dead to life again to the hereafter of freedom.
I love the way Sonia is with her poetry. She is bold and she hasn't forgotten what it means to be of African descent living in America. America trys to forget and repress the feelings, but no one can hide from the truth. The story will be told through people like you, me and Sonia. This book is excellent.
let me wear the day well so when it reaches you you will enjoy it"
Incredible. I felt every emotion while reading this collection. My favorite poems were "Reflections After the June 12th March for Disarmament," "Norma," and "A Letter to Dr. Martin Luther King."
I didn't like this book as much as I liked Shake Loose my Skin but I loved the short stories she included in this book. They were definitely very poignant.
I can't believe I didn't know of her sooner. I was introduced to Sonia Sanchez from another book I read. Check out my podcast review: https://www.spreaker.com/episode/1933...
Note: some overlap of content with her other collection titled Shake Loose My Skin, but not much. Maybe 10%.
Some favourite excerpts are below.
and i cannot look up at you. my body trembles and i mumble things as you stand tall and sacred so easily in yo/self but i am here to love you to carry yo/name on my ankles like bells to dance in yo/arena of love. you are tattooed on the round/soft/ parts of me and yo/smell is always with me.
***
who am i to have loved you in rooms lit by a single wall? who am i to have loved at all as the years come like water and the madness of my blood drains rivers.
Still trying to get into poetry - would love to revisit this once I get more interested. With that being said, I loved the poetry and short stories in this book. Especially the last section of the book, Grenades Are Not Free. This entire section was written during the historical moment of the early 1980s during the nuclear arms race/Cold War, the Reagan era - the new conservative political climate after the politically-charged decade of the 1970s. However, reading it I felt as if absolutely everything I could translate over to the current neo-nazi, neo-liberalism, alt-right political climate. "Reflections After the June 12th March for Disarmament," "Letter to Dr. Martin Luther King," and "MIA's" are SO AMAZING.
My favorite passage from "MIA's":
"they came that nite to the village. calling peace. liberty. freedom. their tongues lassoing us with circus patriotism their elbows wrapped in blood paper they came penises drawn their white togas covering their stained glass legs their thick hands tatooing decay on los campaneros till their young legs rolled out from under them to greet death they came leaving a tatoo of hunger over the land." (p. 75)
I thought I would prefer the poems to the short stories, but that wasn't the case. Her short stories are wonderful, but I didn't find myself as captured by many of the poems. Though, as far as the poems go, Reflections after the June 12th March for Disarmament was especially powerful. MIA's as well.
She paints a realistic picture of the situations that some of face most of the time. I truly loved the After saturday comes Sunday story. I was so embedded into the story I felt concern for the twin babies when they lit up a cigarette.
* Understanding Oppression: African American Rights (Then and Now)
Home-girls and Hand-grenades by Sonia Sanchez | Sonia Sanchez is a poet, activist, and scholar and one of the most important writers of the Black Arts Movement. #activist
"After Saturday Night Comes Sunday" was shocking. if being on dope makes you not even wanna bone Sonia Sanchez, you can bet your ass i'd never touch the stuff!