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Book Cover for: The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing, Marita Golden

The Word: Black Writers Talk About the Transformative Power of Reading and Writing

Marita Golden

Critically acclaimed Black writers reveal how books have shaped their personal lives--in often unexpected ways.

In these thirteen strikingly candid interviews, bestselling authors, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, and writers picked by Oprah's Book Club discuss how the acts of reading and writing have deeply affected their lives by expanding the conceptual borders of their communities and broadening their sense of self.

Edwidge Danticat movingly recounts the first time she encountered a Black character in a book and how this changed her worldview forever; Edward P. Jones speaks openly about being raised by an illiterate mother; J. California Cooper discusses the spiritual sources of her literary inspiration; Nathan McCall explains how reading saved his life while in prison; Pearl Cleage muses eloquently about how other people's stories help one make one's own way in the world; and world-renowned historian John Hope Franklin--in one of the last interviews he gave before his death--touchingly recalls his childhood in the segregated South and how reading opened his mind to life's greater possibilities.

The stories that emerge from these in-depth interviews not only provide an important record of the creative life of leading Black writers but also explore the vast cultural and spiritual benefits of reading and writing, and they support the growing initiative to encourage people to read as both a passion and a pastime.

Book Details

  • Publisher: Crown Publishing Group (NY)
  • Publish Date: Jan 11st, 2011
  • Pages: 224
  • Language: English
  • Edition: undefined - undefined
  • Dimensions: 7.99in - 5.31in - 0.65in - 0.42lb
  • EAN: 9780767929912
  • Categories: • American - African American & Black• Books & Reading

About the Author

MARITA GOLDEN is an award-winning author of more than a dozen works
of fiction and nonfiction. She is the cofounder and president emeritus of the
Hurston/Wright Foundation.

More books by Marita Golden

Book Cover for: How to Become a Black Writer: Creating and Honoring Black Stories That Matter (the Power of Black Stories, Inspiration for Black Storytellers), Marita Golden
Book Cover for: The Strong Black Woman: How a Myth Endangers the Physical and Mental Health of Black Women (African American Studies), Marita Golden
Book Cover for: Don't Play in the Sun: One Woman's Journey Through the Color Complex, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: The New Black Woman: Loves Herself, Has Boundaries, and Heals Every Day (Empowering Book for Women), Marita Golden
Book Cover for: Long Distance Life, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: What Every Black Parent Needs to Know about Saving Our Sons: Institutionalized Racism, Society, and Raising Black Children (Black Parenting Book, Prob, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: Migrations of the Heart: An Autobiography, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: And Do Remember Me, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: After, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: A Woman's Place, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: A Woman's Place: (Of the Diaspora), Marita Golden
Book Cover for: First Page to Finished: On Writing and Living the Writer's Life, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: Living Out Loud A Writer's Journey, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: Saving Our Sons: Raising Black Children in a Turbulent World (New Edition) (Parenting Black Teen Boys, Improving Black Family Health and Relationships, Marita Golden
Book Cover for: Skin Deep: Black Women & White Women Write About Race, Marita Golden

Praise for this book


Critically acclaimed Black writers reveal how books have shaped their personal lives--in often unexpected ways.

In these thirteen strikingly candid interviews, bestselling authors, winners of the Pulitzer Prize, and writers picked by Oprah's Book Club discuss how the acts of reading and writing have deeply affected their lives by expanding the conceptual borders of their communities and broadening their sense of self.

Edwidge Danticat movingly recounts the first time she encountered a Black character in a book and how this changed her worldview forever; Edward P. Jones speaks openly about being raised by an illiterate mother; J. California Cooper discusses the spiritual sources of her literary inspiration; Nathan McCall explains how reading saved his life while in prison; Pearl Cleage muses eloquently about how other people's stories help one make one's own way in the world; and world-renowned historian John Hope Franklin--in one of the last interviews he gave before his death--touchingly recalls his
childhood in the segregated South and how reading opened his mind to life's greater possibilities.

The stories that emerge from these in-depth interviews not only provide an important record of the creative life of leading Black writers but also explore the vast cultural and spiritual benefits of reading and writing, and they support the growing initiative to encourage people to read as both a passion and a pastime.

Includes interviews with:
Chimamanda N. Adichie
Faith Adiele
Pearl Cleage
J. California Cooper
Ellis Cose
Edwidge Danticat
John Hope Franklin
Nikki Giovanni
Wil Haygood
Mat Johnson
Edward P. Jones
David Levering Lewis
Nathan McCall