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Book Cover for: An Encyclopedia of Gardening for Colored Children, Jamaica Kincaid

An Encyclopedia of Gardening for Colored Children

Jamaica Kincaid

A unique collaboration from two of America's leading artists that explores the fascinating and hidden history of the plant world.

In this witty, deeply original book, the renowned novelist Jamaica Kincaid offers an ABC of the plants that define our world and reveals the often brutal history behind them.

Kara Walker, one of America's greatest visual artists, illustrates each entry with provocative, brilliant, enthralling, many-layered watercolors.

There has never been a book like An Encyclopedia of Gardening for Colored Children--so inventive, surprising, and telling about what our gardens reveal.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Farrar, Straus and Giroux
  • Publish Date: May 7th, 2024
  • Pages: 96
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 9.30in - 7.60in - 0.50in - 1.00lb
  • EAN: 9780374608255
  • Categories: Essays & NarrativesCaribbean & Latin AmericanHistory - General

About the Author

Walker, Kara: - Kara Walker is best known for her candid investigation of race, gender, sexuality, and violence through silhouetted figures. She was awarded a MacArthur Fellowship in 1997 and an Eileen Harris Norton Fellowship in 2008. She has been the Tepper Chair in Visual Arts at Rutgers University since 2015. Her work can be found in museums throughout the world, including the Guggenheim, MoMA, the Metropolitan Museum of Art, and the Tate Gallery. She lives in New York.
Kincaid, Jamaica: - Jamaica Kincaid was born in St. John's, Antigua. Her books include At the Bottom of the River, Annie John, Lucy, The Autobiography of My Mother, My Brother, Mr. Potter, and See Now Then. She teaches at Harvard University and lives in Vermont.

Praise for this book

"In collaborating with the fiercely imaginative visual artist Kara Walker, Kincaid has transposed this mode of thinking into an amalgam of erudition, discourse, storytelling and picture book art. A simple child's garden of ABCs their "encyclopedia" is not. Kincaid's adult base, too, will gravitate toward it . . . Cunning and often anthropomorphic, the alphabet book's imagery interpolates child-driven versions of [Walker's] acidly sardonic shadow art with soft-edged, watercolor-drenched vignettes that play hide-and-seek with the letters they're called on to represent . . . Kincaid and Walker are unafraid to spin the world differently and make it matter in new ways." --Celia McGee, The New York Times Book Review