Fotografía de autor
6 Obras 45 Miembros 3 Reseñas

Obras de Lauren Cherelle

Etiquetado

Conocimiento común

Género
female
Nacionalidad
USA

Miembros

Reseñas

Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
I received a copy from BLF Press via LibraryThing for my honest, and heartfelt review. Inspired by a deep longing for writing that embodies the vivacity of Blackness and Black life, Black Joy Unbound is a multi-genre collection from various writers. This anthology brought to me the JOY of being black and growing up black. It magnified the good memories and enlisted smiles upon my face recalling ‘Blue Magic’ hair grease that my mother used on our hair, double-dutching endlessly with my cousins on warm summer days, the music that blared from the living room that had everyone singing and dancing. Don’t forget about the threat to go play outside and not to keep runnin’ in and out of the house from your elders. Rubbing my ashy body down with petroleum jelly, rubbing Vicks vapor rub on the bottom of our feet during the cold season, getting shoes from Buster Browns or Stride Rite’s for a special occasion, my mother pressing on the big toe checking for proper fit.
I particularly enjoyed:
  • It Shines Within Us by Tiffany Smalls
  • Joy In Her Sole: Remembering My Mother’s Shoes by Jeanine DeHoney. I once attended a Patty Labelle concert, and she did indeed strip her feet free from her high heeled shoes. She was amazing.
  • Porkchops by Esperanza Cintrón
  • Pilot by Akua Lezli Hope
  • Feast Day, Celebration of the 1863 Emancipation Proclamation by doris diosa davenport
  • Joy Delayed by Penny Mickleberry, in which I own several books, novels by Penny Mickleberry, and was anxious to read her excerpt and has been writing professionally for most of her adult life, first as a newspaper, radio, and television reporter, and for the past 30+ years as a playwright and novelist
It’s a short (151 pages) but powerful, enjoyable read, and it took me down memory lane, and some eye opening verses, stories and poetry. The cover is also a ray of sunshine with bright yellow and colorful flower petals. It is what everyone needs…JOY!
… (más)
½
 
Denunciada
DonnasBookAddiction | 2 reseñas más. | May 7, 2024 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
It looked like someone had squeezed a store into a single cube of an ice tray (p.28). So much is squeezed into this book that the joy in you will be activated and released. Childhood memories, lovers, ancestors… Poems and prose are grounded in the day to day but allow us to sink deeply in a spiritual bath, warming us from the outside in. Thirty fabulous writers bring their gifts to bare in this gorgeous anthology.
 
Denunciada
Natalie_Coe | 2 reseñas más. | Dec 14, 2023 |
Esta reseña ha sido escrita por los Primeros Reseñadores de LibraryThing.
Black Joy Unbound is an anthology (edited by Stephanie Andrea Allen and Lauren Cherelle) of poetry, vignettes, celebrations of women: their families, of love, and of surviving the unending injustice of racism, and all the cruelties the world inflicts on black women. There is a shimmering beauty in these works, which are of a consistently high quality, even when describing pain. But always joy seems to triumph in these words.

In one of my favorite pieces,“Three Years Later,” A. Brown writes, “we got the scraps. The misshapen and defunct magic.” But out of those scraps, family bonds weave a picture of love, seen through the lens of a high-stakes foot race and a box of origami butterflies.

The pieces are often exuberant outpourings of language, of desire, of willpower, of love. There is a lovely story in which the narrator tries to remember a pair of here mother’s shoes and remembers all the shoes her mother had, remembers shopping at Buster Brown (names from my childhood!), until the shoes bring back all the love contained in that mother/daughter relationship.

Maria Hamilton Abegunde meditates on the necessity for her of writing to connect with the presence of joy, the function of joy, in her lovely piece, “The Spirit of the Rhythm Catches You and You Dance.” Of writing she says, “I am alive because I write. . . . My writing is a practice dedicated to joy’s ‘constant unfolding. . .’”And of dancing she writes, “I am freest, most Black and, therefore, joyful, when I am dancing.” This essay contains so many lines I long to quote, to remember I will have to stop before I end up quoting the entire piece!

I will end with this quote from “To: Whom It May Concern/Re: Black Joy,” poet Regina YC Garcia almost sings:

The children know that there is love
Just there
In Black joy
and for ALL who may be concerned
Know this—
While this joy is juxtaposed to pain
the glory is that it can
Emerge
again, and again
Black Joy
Shine
Radiate
Refine
Create
More and more
Great God! Black joy!

I urge everyone to give themselves the gift of this collection, of the diversity of pieces united by the common theme of “Black Joy Unbound.”
… (más)
 
Denunciada
EllieNYC | 2 reseñas más. | Sep 10, 2023 |

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Estadísticas

Obras
6
Miembros
45
Popularidad
#340,917
Valoración
½ 3.7
Reseñas
3
ISBNs
5