The Selected Poems of Nikki GiovanniThe Selected Poems of Nikki Giovanni
From the revolutionary "The Great Pax Whitie" and "Poem for Aretha" to the sublime "Ego Tripping" and the tender "My House," these 150 mind-speaking, truth-telling poems are at once powerful yet sensual, angry yet affirming. Arranged chronologically, they reflect the changes Giovanni has endured as a Black woman, lover, mother, teacher, and poet. Here is the evocation of a nation's past and present -- intensely personal and fiercely political -- from one of our most compassionate, outspoken observers.
When Nikki Giovanni's poems first emerged from the Black Rights Movement in the late 1960s, she immediately took a place among the most celebrated and controversial poets of the era. Finally, here is the first compilation of Nikki Giovanni's poetry. It is the testimony of a life's work from one of the commanding voices to grace America's political and poetic landscape at the end of the twentieth century.
From the revolutionary "The Great Pax Whitie" and "Poem for Aretha" to the sublime "Ego Tripping" and the tender "My House," these 150 mind-speaking, truth-telling poems are at once powerful yet sensual, angry yet affirming. Arranged chronologically, they reflect the changes Giovanni has endured as a Black woman, lover, mother, teacher, and poet. Here is the evocation of a nation's past and present -- intensely personal and fiercely political -- from one of our most compassionate, outspoken observers.
The jacket copy has it all wrong: "controversial," "political," "revolutionary," "angry." But Giovanni has always been first and foremost a lover, and this is a collection of her love forthright, vulnerable in the affirmative musical language of her Black womanhood. Annotation c. by Book News, Inc., Portland, Or.
An anthology of selected poetry by the distinguished African-American writer celebrates her diverse roles as an African-American woman, lover, poet, and feminist. Tour.
An anthology of poetry by the distinguished writer celebrates her diverse roles as an African American woman, lover, poet, and feminist
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- New York : William Morrow and Co., c1996.
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