Award-winning author Marita Golden explores her writing career and how the igniting power of storytelling is still inspiring generations of Black authors today.
A lifetime of stories to tell. Growing up, Marita would listen to bedtime stories of Sojourner Truth, Frederick Douglass, and many other champions of Black history. Now a champion herself in the literary world, she shares her story in a motivational autobiography you will never forget. How to Become a Black Writer details Marita Golden's life, career, and the most cherished memories she made along the way. From nurturing her passions during the civil rights movement to celebrating her 40th writing anniversary in D.C., Marita shows that every dreamer can inspire others with their story.
A love letter to Black authors and readers. How to Become a Black Writer is not only just Marita's story, but can also be the start of yours. Inside, you'll find lessons and instructions based on her experiences during the renaissance of Black literature to help you cultivate your voice. Featuring timeless knowledge that helped not only Marita, but bestselling storytellers like Nzotake Shange and Toni Morrison, you, too can make a big change in the book publishing world.
Discover meaningful events and the people behind them that helped Marita Golden to become the leading icon she is today, such as:
So if you're looking for more motivational memoirs like Dear Black Girl, Legacy, or Badass Black Girl, you'll love How to Become a Black Writer.
Marita Golden is a bestselling author, journalist, activist, and consultant famous for crafting over 20 fiction and non-fiction works. Starting as a freelance writer and editor for magazines such as The New York Times and Essence Magazine, she released her debut memoir, Migrations of the Heart, in 1984. Since then, she has published renowned books such as Saving Our Sons and Don't Play in the Sun, as well as novels like The Edge of Heaven and After. Marita has also led several lectures and workshops, as well as founding the Hurston-Wright Foundation to help current and future Black authors bring their stories to life. She currently lives in Washington D.C.
Kwame Alexander is a poet, educator, publisher, and New York Times bestselling author of 35 books, including Becoming Muhammad Ali (co-authored with James Patterson), Solo, Rebound, which was shortlisted for the prestigious UK Carnegie Medal, The Caldecott Medal and Newbery Honor-winning picture book, The Undefeated, illustrated by Kadir Nelson, and his NEWBERY medal-winning middle grade novel, The Crossover. A regular contributor to NPR's Morning Edition, Kwame is the recipient of numerous awards, including The Lee Bennett Hopkins Poetry Award, The Coretta Scott King Author Honor, Three NAACP Image Award Nominations, and the 2017 Inaugural Pat Conroy Legacy Award. In 2018, he opened the Barbara E. Alexander Memorial Library and Health Clinic in Ghana, as a part of LEAP for Ghana, an international literacy program he co-founded. Kwame is the Founding Editor of VERSIFY, an imprint of Houghton Mifflin Harcourt that aims to Change the World One Word at a Time.
Kwame's most recent book is Light for the World to See: A Thousand Words on Race and Hope. Find out more info on Kwame and where he'll be at www.KwameAlexander.com.
"Marita Golden is a living and breathing gift to America, and to this world, through her writing, teaching, and helping of others. Marita Golden's journey has been one of communion and community, of literature and the search for freedom for herself, for all people. With her new book How to Become a Black Writer: Creating & Honoring Black Stories That Matter, Marita Golden presents us with a text that is a virtual master class: it is part memoir, part history, and part meditation on race, gender, identity, and how we can be seen, and heard and felt when there are those trying to erase our voices, our books, our history."
--Kevin Powell, GRAMMY-nominated poet and author of 16 books"Marita Golden is a giant of American literature. Also boasting a small stature, I've often
wondered how all that creativity and fierceness is squeezed into only five feet of brilliant
Black woman. Her exquisite fiction and nonfiction have loomed large in my mind."
"How to Become a Black Writer is the book I wish someone had handed me when I was starting out on the writer's journey. Part intimate memoir, part living history (Eldridge Cleaver! Toni Morrison! Audre Lorde!) and part love letter to the power of storytelling and the vital necessity of art for Black people, this book would have saved me valuable time and artistic loneliness. Through her storied career, her peerless teaching and her ceaseless activism and institution building, Marita Golden had already done more for Black literature and Black writers than anyone had the right to ask. With this wise and witty volume-this covering, this gift to us-she has somehow done even more."
--Kimberly Mclarin, author of Everyday Something Has Tried to Kill Me and Has Failed"In How to Become a Black Writer, award-winning author and institution builder Marita Golden takes us on an empowering and resourceful personal journey to discover the sorcery of words and the magic that attends her deep love of Black stories and Black lives."
--Joanne V. Gabbin, founder of the Furious Flower Poetry Center and founder and executive director of the Wintergreen Women Writers Collective"Marita Golden pours love, passion, and wisdom into this writer's guide for unlocking creativity, purpose, and power. The fascinating life journey that honed her voice and shaped her mission is a template sure to inspire budding writers and affirm established authors."
--A'Lelia Bundles, author of On Her Own Ground: The Life and Times of Madam C. J. Walker"Marita Golden's How to Become a Black Writer is a gift to all Black writers--aspiring, new, and seasoned scribes alike. It is equal parts memoir, pep talk, writers' toolkit, and historical record of our rich Black literary tradition. Golden beautifully weaves the challenges and triumphs of her life on and off the page to show the many ways of fashioning a creative life. Golden teaches us that we cannot walk this literary road alone and provides a roadmap for how she has built community for herself and sustainable organizations that support Black writers. How to Become a Black Writer is a testament to how our inherited legacies and our ancestors' dreams nurture us. Golden reminds us that writing is a ministry and that telling transformative stories is sacred work. How to Become a Black Writer is an exquisite read. No matter where you are in your writing journey, Golden's gems will bless your soul."
--Jodi M. Savage, author of The Death of a Jaybird: Essays on Mothers and Daughters and the Things They Leave Behind