Editorial Reviews
From School Library
Journal
Grade 5 Up. Countless
anthologies of African-American poetry, many with elaborate illustrations,
have appeared since Adoff's I Am the Darker Brother (Macmillan, 1968) was
published. It remains remarkable in its ability to present the
African-American experience through poetry that speaks for itself without
the distraction of artwork or the need to trumpet itself as being
multicultural. This revised and updated edition has 21 new selections,
representing 19 poets (9 of them women), added to the thematic sections of
the original title. Now, readers can meet more contemporary writers such as
Rita Dove, Maya Angelou, and Ishmael Reed as well as classic black poets
like Countee Cullen, Paul Laurence Dunbar, and Langston Hughes. An
introduction puts the book in historical context and a foreword offers
encouragement to a new generation of readers. Notes and biographies have
been updated and added where appropriate and Andrews's spare but evocative
line drawings still open each section. Because of the historical context of
many of the poems, the book will be much in demand during Black History
Month, but it should be used and treasured as part of the larger canon of
literature to be enjoyed by all Americans at all times of the year. An
indispensable addition to library collections. Carrie Schadle, New York
Public Library
Copyright 1997 Reed Business Information, Inc.
From Booklist
Gr. 7 and up. Nearly 30 years
after poet and anthologist Adoff first published his classic core collection
of black poetry, this new edition has been expanded to include 21 additional
poets, 10 of them women. In a celebratory after word, Adoff remembers how he
collected those first poems into a book in 1968 so that he could present to
his students, of all racial and ethnic backgrounds, "the complete vision of
an American literature." Many of us can still remember the excitement
of reading that original anthology, of discovering those distinct, powerful
voices so long left out of the American canon. The arrangement here is still
by theme, with the new poems echoing, arguing with, connecting, and
extending the core. There are eloquent introductions by critic Rudine Sims
Bishop and poet Nikki Giovanni and notes at the back on the poems as well as
brief biographies of the poets. A must purchase. Hazel Rochman
Ingram
A collection of
African-American poetry is specifically created for young readers and
includes a foreword by Nikki Giovanni and contributions by such prominent
writers as Langston Hughes and Maya Angelou.
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