African American Writers
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A spectacular collection of photographs that showcases the nation's abundant treasury of African American writers
Ai Will Alexander Robert Allen Maya Angelou Amiri Baraka Paul Beatty David Bradley Gwendolyn Brooks Ed Bullins Barbara Christian Cheryl Clarke Lucille Clifton Wanda Coleman Edwidge Danticat Angela Davis Toi Derricotte Samuel R. Delany Rita Dove Frances Smith Foster Ernest Gaines Henry Louis Gates, Jr. Nikki Giovanni Jewelle Gomez Rosa Guy Forrest Hamer Michael S. Harper Essex Hemphill Charles Johnson June Jordan Randall Kenan Jamaica Kincaid Yusef Komunyakaa Audre Lorde Nathaniel Mackey Haki Madhubuti Clarence Major Paule Marshall Colleen McElroy Toni Morrison Walter Mosley Harryette Mullen Albert Murray Gloria Naylor Barbara Neely Pat Parker Ishmael Reed Faith Ringgold Kalamu ya Salaam Sonia Sanchez Sapphire Ntozake Shange Quincy Troupe Derek Walcott Alice Walker Afaa Michael Weaver John Edgar Wideman John A. Williams Sherley Anne Williams August Wilson Al Young Over a period of thirty years Lynda Koolish has been photographing African American authors in their homes, at public readings, in universities, and at conferences and festivals. As this volume of her photographs presents the faces of acclaimed African American writers, it also highlights the diversity within African American literature and celebrates the many genres it explores. Koolish includes authors of diverse identities--Caribbean writers who have immigrated to the United States, writers of mixed heritage, writers who proudly proclaim their African roots, playwrights, poets, novelists, critics, scholars, short story writers, oral storytellers, and memoirists. Koolish's photographs convey a sense of clarity, warmth, and beauty. Along with each portrait she provides a short biographical essay that comprises the artistic vision of the author. Her superb gallery of fifty-nine black-and-white photographs presents a grand assembly. "We know these authors," Cynthia Tucker says. "We know their words. We can quote favorite passages from their essays, their poems, their novels. Yet we have rarely seen their faces. We have rarely seen them reading their works, talking to audiences, explaining their views. We know some important part of them but cannot attach to it a pair of eyes, a furrowed brow, a head full of dreadlocks. Now we can look at the eyes that see so much, that transform our understanding of the world. And we can look for, even if we cannot hope to find, the source of their genius." This is the first book devoted exclusively to photographic portraits of African American writers since Carl Van Vechten's work featuring Harlem Renaissance writers in the 1920s and 1930s. Chosen by the American Library Association as one of the top 35 books from university presses in 2001, African American Writers: Portraits and Visions impressed ALA reviewer Donna Seaman, who wrote: "Koolish's elegant black-and-white photographs of African American writers seem empathic, as though the camera channeled more than mere light and shadow to drink in the writers' thoughts and feelings, the hum of their minds and thrum of their bodies. Each studied yet dynamic portrait is accompanied by a brief essay in which Koolish, a professor of literature as well as a photographer, describes with precision and zest the timbre of the writers' voices, the spirit of their work, and the significance of their contribution to the canon... Koolish's absorbing portraits, most of recent vintage, some from the 1980s, document sixty writers essential to American letters and, in a very real sense, to a richly imagined life." Lynda Koolish, a scholar of African American literature, is a Professor of English and comparative literature at San Diego State University. She is well known also as a professional photographer whose work has appeared in the New York Times, Belles Lettres, Poetry Flash, and Modern Fiction Studies. Her photography has been featured in many exhibitions, including the 1994 juried show at the Cork Gallery in the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts and in Celebrating Women Writers, a calendar published by the New York Public Library in 1999. Cynthia Tucker is a syndicated columnist at the Atlanta Constitution and a regularly featured commentator on PBS's The News Hour with Jim Lehrer. 132 pp., 60 b&w duotone photographs |
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