![There's a Revolution Outside, My Love](https://dl.bookem.ir/covers/ISBN13/9780593314708.jpg)
There's a Revolution Outside, My Love
Letters from a Crisis
کتاب های مرتبط
- اطلاعات
- نقد و بررسی
- دیدگاه کاربران
نقد و بررسی
![Kirkus](https://images.contentreserve.com/kirkus_logo.png)
April 1, 2021
Reflections on racism from 40 writers. Pulitzer Prize winner Smith, former poet laureate of the U.S., and Freeman, an executive editor at Knopf, gather poems, letters, and essays, most previously published in Literary Hub, bearing witness to systemic oppression and racial injustice. Angry, rueful, and defiant, the impressive roster of award-winning writers and academics portrays a nation wracked by pain. "There's a revolution outside, my love," journalist and cultural critic Kirsten West Savali writes in a moving letter to her son. "Where in the world is safe for you, my beautiful, beautiful boy?" Jasmon Drain, addressing his daughter, reflects that during the pandemic, she must wear two masks: one, her skin color; the other, protection against the virus. "Your born mask brought fear. This new one redoubles it," he writes. "There's no vaccine for who you'll be or how you'll be viewed, for the unseen or visible parts that will ofttimes be assumed of you." Protests against police brutality inspired many pieces: "Like an arrow," writes Native American writer Layli Long Soldier, "the images of George Floyd pierced my soul." Living in Madison, Wisconsin, where he teaches creative writing, poet Amaud Jamaul Johnson describes "the Fault Lines of Midwestern Racism": insidious expressions of prejudice among Whites who treat him like "a kind of mascot, a pet Negro, that one Black body in the coffee shop or at the private pool; I've become everyone's one Black friend." Francisco Goldman compares racist dictators to Trump: "The aftereffects of an evil dictatorship are hard to get rid of, to scrub clean. It usually involves a steadfast struggle, and justice is the only remedy." In "A Letter to Black America," Smith invokes Black solidarity, exhorting her readers to "revel in the depth and the flair and the belief and the secrecy of Blackness. We are lucky to be who we are, and we know it." Other contributors include Edwidge Danticat, Gregory Pardlo, Ross Gay, and Camille T. Dungy. An eloquent and urgent collection.
COPYRIGHT(2021) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
![Booklist](https://images.contentreserve.com/booklist_logo.png)
May 1, 2021
The pandemic summer of 2020, a season of isolation, anxiety, anguish, police violence, and protest, inspired Pulitzer Prize-winning poet and former U.S. Poet Laureate Smith to reflect on the Freedom Summer of 1964, as she so incisively delineates in her preface, and to create, with co-editor Freeman, this clarion coast-to-coast record of "America's most recent Freedom Summer." Forty BIPOC writers and members of other marginalized groups present galvanizing poems and essays, most of which first appeared in Literary Hub. Poet Su Hwang, based in Minneapolis, where George Floyd was murdered by the police, addresses the surge in anti-Black and anti-Asian American racism. Claudia Castro Luna reports on the lockdown and protests in Seattle. The late Randall Kenan writes from North Carolina about a "new war against white supremacy." Nikky Finney addresses a letter to longtime U.S. representative and civil rights activist John Lewis; Craig Santos Perez admits his "survivor's guilt." Other contributors, including Julia Alvarez, Amaud Jamaul Johnson, and Layli Long Soldier, consider the legacy of traumas and the possibility of change. A potent and momentous in-the-moment response to an urgent and indelible time.
COPYRIGHT(2021) Booklist, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.
دیدگاه کاربران