Singing in the Comeback Choir
Title | Singing in the Comeback Choir PDF eBook |
Author | Bebe Moore Campbell |
Publisher | Berkley |
Pages | 406 |
Release | 1999 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 9780425166628 |
A successful African American television producer faces her grandmother's decline.
Your Blues Ain't Like Mine
Title | Your Blues Ain't Like Mine PDF eBook |
Author | Bebe Moore Campbell |
Publisher | Ballantine Books |
Pages | 354 |
Release | 1993-08-10 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0345383958 |
"Intriguing...A thoughtful, intelligent work...The novel traces the yeasr from he '50s to the ate '80s, from Eisenhower to George Bush....She writes with simple eloquence about small-town life in the South, right after the start of the great social upheaval of he civil rights movement....Campbell has a strong creative voice." THE WASHINGTON POST BOOK WORLD Chicago-born Amrstrong Tood is fifteen, black, and unused to the ways of the segregated Deep South, when his mother sends him to spend the summer with relatives in rural Mississippi. For speaking a few innocuous words in French to a white woman, Armstrong is killed. And the precariously balanced world and its determined people--white and black--are changed, then and forever, by the horror of poverty, the legacy of justice, and the singular gift of love's power to heal.
The Songs Became the Stories
Title | The Songs Became the Stories PDF eBook |
Author | Robert H. Cataliotti |
Publisher | Peter Lang |
Pages | 282 |
Release | 2007 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9780820488509 |
The Songs Became the Stories: The Music in African-American Fiction, 1970-2005 is a sequel to The Music in African-American Fiction, which traced the representation of music in fiction from its mid-nineteenth-century roots in slave narratives through the Black Arts Movement of the 1960s. The Songs Became the Stories continues the historical, critical and musicological analyses of the first book through an examination of many of the major figures in African-American fiction over the past thirty-five years, including Ishmael Reed, Toni Morrison, Ntozake Shange, Nathaniel Mackey, Alice Walker, Albert Murray and John Edgar Wideman. The volume also includes an extensive annotated discography and excerpts from first-hand interviews with major African-American musical artists.
72 Hour Hold
Title | 72 Hour Hold PDF eBook |
Author | Bebe Moore Campbell |
Publisher | Anchor |
Pages | 338 |
Release | 2007-12-18 |
Genre | Fiction |
ISBN | 0307424251 |
NEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • "A tightly woven, well-written story about mothers and daughters, highs and lows, ex-husbands and boyfriends.... Universally touching." —San Francisco Chronicle Trina is eighteen and suffers from bi-polar disorder, making her paranoid, wild, and violent. Frightened by her own child, Keri searches for help, quickly learning that the mental health community can only offer her a seventy-two hour hold. After these three days Trina is off on her own again. Fed up with the bureaucracy and determined to save her daughter by any means necessary, Keri signs on for an illegal intervention known as The Program, a group of radicals who eschew the psychiatric system and model themselves after the Underground Railroad. In the upheaval that follows, she is forced to confront a past that refuses to stay buried, even as she battles to secure a future for her child.
What You Owe Me
Title | What You Owe Me PDF eBook |
Author | Bebe Moore Campbell |
Publisher | Berkley Books |
Pages | 0 |
Release | 2002 |
Genre | African American business enterprises |
ISBN | 9780425186312 |
Matriece is determined to collect what she thinks a huge cosmetics conglomerate owes her late mother.
The New Great American Writers Cookbook
Title | The New Great American Writers Cookbook PDF eBook |
Author | Dean Faulkner Wells |
Publisher | Univ. Press of Mississippi |
Pages | 266 |
Release | 2009-10-20 |
Genre | Cooking |
ISBN | 1496801296 |
Published in 1981, The Great American Writers Cookbook was a treasure trove of recipes submitted by the country's most celebrated authors. This all-new collection, a fine follow-up for a new era, features recipes that range from peanut butter sandwiches to eggplant caviar, with dishes—and anecdotes—offered by writers of every imaginable stripe, ethnicity, region, and culture in America. Contemporary novelists such as National Book Award winners Jonathan Franzen and the late, great Bernard Malamud share space with columnists Dave Barry, P. J. O'Rourke, and Christopher Buckley, with journalists and novelists Andrei Codrescu, Anna Quindlen, and John Berendt, and with poet and novelist Sandra Cisneros. The interspersing of recipes from older and younger generations reveals cookery as creatively diverse as the writings from David Guterson, T. C. Boyle, Elizabeth McCracken, and former First Lady Barbara Bush. This unusually tangy assortment of more than 150 recipes runs the gamut from tofu to heart-clogging chili. Writers play fast and loose with ingredients and forewarn readers planning to try them that some of the most seductive recipes are loaded with cholesterol. With such temptations as “Thighs of Delight,” “Crevettes Désir,” a “sexy spaghetti sauce,” and a lemon icebox pie that allegedly elicits proposals of marriage, the recipes—and stories revealing their origins—is enticing, bizarre, and promisingly tasty. The collection gives particular emphasis to contemporary southern writers—Padgett Powell, Jack Butler, Larry Brown, Ellen Gilchrist, and Josephine Humphreys, among others, although their recipes are often far from being quintessentially “southern.” Scintillating with writerly antics and witty histories as transfixing as the recipes themselves, The New Great American Writers Cookbook is not just for daring cooks. It's also a collector’s item for food-doting lovers of American literature.
Spiritual, Blues, and Jazz People in African American Fiction
Title | Spiritual, Blues, and Jazz People in African American Fiction PDF eBook |
Author | A. Yemisi Jimoh |
Publisher | Univ. of Tennessee Press |
Pages | 300 |
Release | 2002 |
Genre | Literary Criticism |
ISBN | 9781572331723 |
Jimoh (English, U. of Arkansas-Fayetteville) investigates African American intracultural issues that inform a more broadly intertextual use of music in creating characters and themes in fiction by US black writers. Conventional close readings of texts, she argues, often miss historical-sociopolitical discourses that can illuminate African American narratives. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR