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Appalachian Elegy

Poetry and Place

ebook
1 of 2 copies available
1 of 2 copies available

Author, activist, feminist, teacher, and artist bell hooks is celebrated as one of the nation's leading intellectuals. Born in Hopkinsville, Kentucky, hooks drew her unique pseudonym from the name of her grandmother, an intelligent and strong-willed African American woman who inspired her to stand up against a dominating and repressive society. Her poetry, novels, memoirs, and children's books reflect her Appalachian upbringing and feature her struggles with racially integrated schools and unwelcome authority figures. One of Utne Reader's "100 Visionaries Who Can Change Your Life," hooks has won wide acclaim from critics and readers alike. In Appalachian Elegy, bell hooks continues her work as an imagist of life's harsh realities in a collection of poems inspired by her childhood in the isolated hills and hidden hollows of Kentucky. At once meditative, confessional, and political, this poignant volume draws the reader deep into the experience of living in Appalachia. Touching on such topics as the marginalization of its people and the environmental degradation it has suffered over the years, hooks's poetry quietly elegizes the slow loss of an identity while also celebrating that which is constant, firmly rooted in a place that is no longer whole.

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    • Booklist

      September 15, 2012
      Path-breaking writer, teacher, and intellectual hooks continues mining her memories of her childhood in the Kentucky hills and her reflections on the ties between African Americans and the land. These subjects shape her essay collection, Belonging: A Culture of Place (2008). Here she turns to poetry, as she did in When Angels Speak of Love (2007), specifically the elegy, to mourn what was lost when black farmers were forced off their land and to celebrate what can be reclaimed. In this book-length cycle ofpoems about history, family, cultivation, and nature, hooks writes of ancestral rights / to turn the ground over; of the earth that is all at once a grave / a resting place a bed of new beginnings / avalanche of splendor; and of bloodshed and healing, toil and torment, mud, crops, wildflowers, and swans. Sown with images of rain and fertility, captive animals and enslaved people, grass beyond green and the ravages of coal mining, hooks' distilled lyrics possess the weight of stones in a foundation and logs in a cabin even as they sing and soar.(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2012, American Library Association.)

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