Notes From Bethabara Park: Cheri Paris Edwards and The Other Sister (a book review)
Country Way East, Okemos MI, Wednesday, March 16, 2011 I believe that novels have the mystical ability to enter our…
Country Way East, Okemos MI, Wednesday, March 16, 2011 I believe that novels have the mystical ability to enter our…
Life is funny like that: the road we take, Serling’s signpost ahead, the mis-directed arrow with no GPS capability, point indiscriminately missed. This is it…
WINNER OF THE 2010 BEST BOOKS AWARD FOR AFRICAN-AMERICAN FICTION!! So, as a matter of course, I found…
Tiffany Nicole Robinson’s debut novel My Own Terms was meant to be a wondrously triumphant tale of one woman’s attempt to re-discover the meaning…
Craft does a marvelous job opening this ambitious novel in proper “multicultural” context (even though Carroll City is fictitious) giving us a bird-seye view of rich culture, smells, tastes, interiors, all meshed in a darlingly spiced martini-mix of Creole du Jour. Even more interesting is the descriptive pictures she gives of Maggie French. This following passage – the opening of the book – is as good as it gets:
Maggie French was beautiful in the eyes of most beholders, especially in men’s eyes. Even cheap mirrors reflected it. At times, Maggie felt empowered by her beauty, but at other times it failed her. Her hair was thick and silken, light ash brown, with long,thinned bangs and blunt cut-cut to shoulder length. Her alabaster skin had a hint of cream. Her eyes changed from pale violet to deep purple, framed by thick, dark, long lashes. She had an arrogantly perfect nose and lusciously full lips in an oval face. Face carried her sensuous five-foot-seven-inch body like the model she once had been.
Eldridge Cleaver did it. Yusef Shakur did it. His daddy, Ahjamu Baruti, did it too. Tookie William’s did it with Blue Rage, Black…
Brenda noticed me and grabbed my hand to join her for a drink. What’s up Push baby? Nothing much, ’bout…
Alan Sakowitz’s book arrived on my doorstep just as I began to digest the whole Bernie Madoff reality. I was confused:…
Perhaps Nadalina could have rescued The Life and Thoughts of Shaun Pascal from imminent obscurity, but this internal love affair…