LUCY NEGRO, REDUX: The Bard, a Book, and a Ballet

Awards:   Short-listed for NAACP Image Award for Best Young Adult Fiction 2013 Winner of The Harlem Book Fair Phyllis Wheatley Award for Best Young Adult Fiction 2013 (United States)
Author:   Caroline Randall Williams ,  Paul Vasterling
Publisher:   Third Man Books
ISBN:  

9780997457827


Pages:   119
Publication Date:   25 April 2019
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
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LUCY NEGRO, REDUX: The Bard, a Book, and a Ballet


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Awards

  • Short-listed for NAACP Image Award for Best Young Adult Fiction 2013
  • Winner of The Harlem Book Fair Phyllis Wheatley Award for Best Young Adult Fiction 2013 (United States)

Overview

Full Product Details

Author:   Caroline Randall Williams ,  Paul Vasterling
Publisher:   Third Man Books
Imprint:   Third Man Books
Dimensions:   Width: 13.30cm , Height: 1.30cm , Length: 20.90cm
Weight:   0.226kg
ISBN:  

9780997457827


ISBN 10:   0997457821
Pages:   119
Publication Date:   25 April 2019
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Temporarily unavailable   Availability explained
The supplier advises that this item is temporarily unavailable. It will be ordered for you and placed on backorder. Once it does come back in stock, we will ship it out to you.

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Reviews

"From BookSlut: “Lucy Negro, Redux is a proud rallying cry of freedom and delight in the sublime magic of Blackness. Randall Williams is keen on dismantling the trope of the Black woman as the Mule of the World, a voiceless pleasure thing. Combining history with honesty and the sting of personal memories, Lucy is no man's ""exotic"" land to claim. She rises above, radical mortal instrument of God's beauty.” - Vanessa Willoughby. Full review: http://www.bookslut.com/poetry/2015_09_021280.php From Chapter 16: “While the premise of Lucy Negro, Redux might be academic, the collection couldn’t be further from the kind of antique manuscripts that may only be touched with gloves. These poems are tangible, very much of our own turbulent world. As the first poem, “BlackLucyNegro I,” explains, “she’s become an Other / way to talk about skin.” Williams pulls Lucy’s story into this world, examining both historical and contemporary problems of racism. This is a vital book, at once capable of searing insight and complex emotion. The poems speak to our time while giving voice to a ghost.” - Erica Wright Full review: https://chapter16.org/not-a-partridge-or-a-ruby/ From Cider Press Review: “As radical as the integration of Sally Hemmings’ descendants into Jefferson family reunions is Black Luce’s integration into the poetic ideals of the sonnet. There is more than cursing in Black Luce’s power. She manages to bless all her pan-African daughters. If “Lucy own her body/She run many other” as Williams reports, through Lucy, all young women of color embody the platonic ideal of Western Civilization’s finest love elegies. Through Williams’ reclamation of Shakespeare, African diasporic literature grows redolent with the possibility of being simply good literature without identity subdivisions, as worthy as Shakespeare, not other but Cleopatra to his Anthony, beloved for its narrative skill as Othello was to Desdemona, not separated, just elbow-to-elbow with the greats at the lunch counter, individual but never parenthetical. Buy this radical collection of poetry. Steal it if you must. Read it at all costs.” - Ann Babson Full review: http://ciderpressreview.com/reviews/a-welcome-bridge- lucy-negro-redux-by-carolyn-randall-williams-marches-on-shakespeare-for-black-southern-writers/#.WyAhxyMrKCg"


From Chapter 16: While the premise of Lucy Negro, Redux might be academic, the collection couldn't be further from the kind of antique manuscripts that may only be touched with gloves. These poems are tangible, very much of our own turbulent world. As the first poem, BlackLucyNegro I, explains, she's become an Other / way to talk about skin. Williams pulls Lucy's story into this world, examining both historical and contemporary problems of racism. This is a vital book, at once capable of searing insight and complex emotion. The poems speak to our time while giving voice to a ghost. - Erica Wright Full review: https://chapter16.org/not-a-partridge-or-a-ruby/ From Cider Press Review: As radical as the integration of Sally Hemmings' descendants into Jefferson family reunions is Black Luce's integration into the poetic ideals of the sonnet. There is more than cursing in Black Luce's power. She manages to bless all her pan-African daughters. If Lucy own her body/She run many other as Williams reports, through Lucy, all young women of color embody the platonic ideal of Western Civilization's finest love elegies. Through Williams' reclamation of Shakespeare, African diasporic literature grows redolent with the possibility of being simply good literature without identity subdivisions, as worthy as Shakespeare, not other but Cleopatra to his Anthony, beloved for its narrative skill as Othello was to Desdemona, not separated, just elbow-to-elbow with the greats at the lunch counter, individual but never parenthetical. Buy this radical collection of poetry. Steal it if you must. Read it at all costs. - Ann Babson Full review: http://ciderpressreview.com/reviews/a-welcome-bridge- lucy-negro-redux-by-carolyn-randall-williams-marches-on-shakespeare-for-black-southern-writers/#.WyAhxyMrKCg From BookSlut: Lucy Negro, Redux is a proud rallying cry of freedom and delight in the sublime magic of Blackness. Randall Williams is keen on dismantling the trope of the Black woman as the Mule of the World, a voiceless pleasure thing. Combining history with honesty and the sting of personal memories, Lucy is no man's exotic land to claim. She rises above, radical mortal instrument of God's beauty. - Vanessa Willoughby. Full review: http://www.bookslut.com/poetry/2015_09_021280.php


Author Information

Caroline Randall Williams is a multi-genre writer and and educator in Nashville Tennessee. She is co-author of the Phyllis Wheatley Award-winning young adult novel The Diary of B.B. Bright, and the NAACP Image Award-winning cookbook Soul Food Love. Named by Southern Living as ""One of the 50 People changing the South,"" the Cave Canem fellow has been published in multiple journals, essay collections and news outlets, including The Iowa Review, The Massachusetts Review, CherryBombe and the New York Times. Her debut collection of poetry, Lucy Negro, Redux: The Bard, a Book, and a Ballet (Third Man Books, Spring 2019) is currently being turned into a ballet.

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