Life Notes: Personal Writings by Contemporary Black Women

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Author: Patricia Bell-Scott

ISBN-10: 0393312062

ISBN-13: 9780393312065

Category: African American Women's Biography

Life Notes is the first collection devoted exclusively to writings from the journals, diaries, and personal notebooks of contemporary black women.\ \ These intensely personal testimonies illuminate the complexities of black women's lives, offering unique reflections about self, family, intimacy, work, politics, life transitions, violation, and recovery.\ \ \ \ These intensely personal testimonies illuminate the complexities of black women's lives, offering unique...

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Life Notes is the first collection devoted exclusively to writings from the journals, diaries, and personal notebooks of contemporary black women.Publishers WeeklyThis involving collection gathers more than 50 excerpts (some previously published) from the diaries and journals of black women from North America, Europe, Africa and the Caribbean islands. The writings are arranged by loose subjects such as childhood, the search for self, hardships and love. Bell-Scott, who co-edited Double stitch: Black Women Write About Mothers and Daughters , has made her selections with an emphasis on diversity. Included are pieces written by women of varying ages, backgrounds and expectations, women with disabilities and lesbians. Some of the writers are well-known (Alice Walker, Rita Dove, Audre Lorde); others are new voices. In an unusual testimony, Faith Aidele describes the time she lived as a Buddhist nun. These personal writings offer a unique look at the experience of being black and female. (Feb.)

Foreword13Black Women Writing Lives: An Introduction17Acknowledgments27Pt. 1Reflecting GirlhoodIn Her Womb31Chocolate Tears and Dreams44Fire and Snow54Myself63Weeds66Arrival69Pt. 2Searching for SelfAt an Artist's Colony79A Sistah Outsider92The Sins of Our Fathers110Oreo Blues126A Hair Piece142Pt. 3Meaning and WorkBlack Woman Artist Becoming151The House That Jill Built160Sometimes a Poem is Twenty Years of Memory175At Yaddo183Pt. 4Living LoveNot Letting Go of My Anchor191Breaking the Ties That Bind Me214Setting Relationship Limits220Golden Boy229Three Daughters231Pt. 5Naming Violation and BetrayalReflections of Breaking Glass241Love in the Time of AIDS244Writing, Screaming, and Healing249Holding On and Remembering266Flashbacks and Wounded Children271Pt. 6Fighting BackThe Cancer Journals275The Years In Between281A Small Place300And Still Rise309The Boston Murders315Milwaukee Uncle321Pt. 7Claiming a New SelfStarting Over327On Turning Fifty336Going Through My Changes341Jive Talk and Random Thoughts345Looking348wOn "Going Home"350Natural Monuments355Pt. 8Writing from a Different PlaceUbud, Bali361Standing Alone with Myself364Differences and Blurred Vision389Bullet Holes of Resistance398Beautifully Ugly401Showing Our True Colors408Afterword411Contributors415Credits427

\ Maya Angelou“Featured here are works by such well-known authors as bell hooks, Jamaica Kincaid, Rita Dove, Audre Lorde, and Alice Walker, as well as by emerging and previously unpublished writers. The contributors are native daughters from three continents and the Caribbean, ranging in age from eight to sixty. Never in all the years have I encountered as intimate work as Life Notes. Each woman spoke secretly to me and only me, and I appreciated every admission.”\ \ \ \ \ Gloria Steinem“Life Notes is a collection of pieces that are intimate and universal, accessible and profound. Let traditional novelists eat their hearts out—for these women have written their hearts out.”\ \ \ Publishers WeeklyThis involving collection gathers more than 50 excerpts (some previously published) from the diaries and journals of black women from North America, Europe, Africa and the Caribbean islands. The writings are arranged by loose subjects such as childhood, the search for self, hardships and love. Bell-Scott, who co-edited Double stitch: Black Women Write About Mothers and Daughters , has made her selections with an emphasis on diversity. Included are pieces written by women of varying ages, backgrounds and expectations, women with disabilities and lesbians. Some of the writers are well-known (Alice Walker, Rita Dove, Audre Lorde); others are new voices. In an unusual testimony, Faith Aidele describes the time she lived as a Buddhist nun. These personal writings offer a unique look at the experience of being black and female. (Feb.)\ \ \ \ \ Library JournalIntimate, intensive, and illuminating are just a few words that describe this emotionally enriched anthology. Forty-nine writers, published and unpublished, from three continents and the Caribbean contribute excerpts from their journals, diaries, and personal notebooks. Editor Bell-Scott ( Doublestitch , Beacon Pr., 1991) has collected the work of these writers, from the famous, like bell hooks, to those unknown to American readers, in order to highlight of the complexities and obstacles faced by black women from a broad spectrum throughout their lives. Highly recommended for readers from all backgrounds interested in literature and for those involved in the fields of mental health and self-therapy.-- Gayle Leach-Bethea , Maryland House of Corrections, Jessup\ \ \ \ \ School Library JournalYA-This marvelous anthology includes the unedited, uncensored journal entries of 50 black women written in the form of prose, letters, poetry, self-dialogue, or meditations. They are artists, educators, activists, lesbians, students, unemployed, homemakers, divorced, single mothers, and disabled. America, Europe, and Africa are represented. Divided into eight sections and ranging from early childhood to middle years to old age, the selections feature women's reflections on work, love, self-identity, child abuse, racial prejudice, political commentaries, and creating one's own place in this society. The memories are at times funny, raunchy, poignant, and tragic, but always speak to the human condition. Some famous authors, such as Alice Walker, Rita Dove, and Bell Hooks, have made contributions. However, Bell-Scott's goals are to honor the nameless who record their lives in the face of enormous disadvantages; share the richness of experiences lost when diversity is ignored; authenticate women's ability to speak for themselves; and encourage other generations to write for self-knowledge, empowerment, and posterity. They are beautifully met in this enriching and enlightening collection.-Pat Royal, Crossland High School, Camp Springs, MD\ \ \ \ \ BooknewsA collection of personal writings, diaries and journals by black women from three continents and the Caribbean. Selections by well-known authors such as Alice Walker, bell hooks, and Audre Lorde are included, as well as writing by unknown and unpublished writers. The youngest contributor is an eight-year-old from Nigeria; the oldest is a 65-year-old retired African American telephone operator. All offer unique reflections on the complexities of black women's lives. Includes notes on contributors. Annotation c. Book News, Inc., Portland, OR (booknews.com)\ \