Truth Be Told
Autor Linda Susan Jacksonen Limba Engleză Paperback – 14 mar 2024
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781954245969
ISBN-10: 1954245963
Pagini: 100
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: FOUR WAY BOOKS
Colecția Four Way Books
ISBN-10: 1954245963
Pagini: 100
Dimensiuni: 152 x 229 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.19 kg
Editura: FOUR WAY BOOKS
Colecția Four Way Books
Recenzii
In our violence, in our need, in our appetite for every last thing, we are no different than even the most terrifying gods. What might heal us or make us whole? The truth, told tenderly or with bared teeth—which is what Linda Susan Jackson delivers in poem after astonishing poem. Truth Be Told is in every way a Revelation.
—Tracy K. Smith
When Toni Morrison, in her Nobel Laureate Lecture, offers the writerly imperative to, “tell us what the world has been to you in the dark places and in the light,” Linda Susan Jackson heard her clearly. In Truth Be Told, Jackson explores womanhood with the precision of Morrison by extending the lives of the characters from The Bluest Eye, allowing them to speak to our present moment. There’s the wisdom of Morrison; the wisdom of Jackson; and the wisdom of young Pecola Breedlove, the protagonist of the novel, but there’s more: there’s also the lyric intensity, the music of the taut line, coupled with the sagacity, which is really all Jackson at the top of her game. And this would be plenty, but, yes, there’s even more. Jackson manages
to hit us with her uses of enchantment not only by reviving the sisterhood of Persephone but also of the women—mothers, sisters, daughters, and lovers—in the world around us. This collection reads like a novel that is part bildungsroman, part roman á clef, and forms, as a whole, the interior life of many real and imagined people, who are dealing both with love and with loss, all of which makes up a life. All I can say is that if you don’t laugh a little, if your eyes don’t well up in tears a little, if you don’t learn anything between these pages, I’ll have to “summon an ancient refrain”: “With the blues—no need to explain.”
—A. Van Jordan
Linda Susan Jackson’s Truth Be Told conjures these poems to bloom between the breaths of Toni Morrison’s text and ancient mythology. She sings us a drylongso meditation on Black womanhood in the cauldron of America’s blue-eyed blues. From this Truth, we learn how to navigate the space between fiction and myth on the perilous boat of poetry till we land winded and whole on homeland’s shore the way “A bird in the night / flies her song through the darkness— / tremolo in blues.”
—Tyehimba Jess
—Tracy K. Smith
When Toni Morrison, in her Nobel Laureate Lecture, offers the writerly imperative to, “tell us what the world has been to you in the dark places and in the light,” Linda Susan Jackson heard her clearly. In Truth Be Told, Jackson explores womanhood with the precision of Morrison by extending the lives of the characters from The Bluest Eye, allowing them to speak to our present moment. There’s the wisdom of Morrison; the wisdom of Jackson; and the wisdom of young Pecola Breedlove, the protagonist of the novel, but there’s more: there’s also the lyric intensity, the music of the taut line, coupled with the sagacity, which is really all Jackson at the top of her game. And this would be plenty, but, yes, there’s even more. Jackson manages
to hit us with her uses of enchantment not only by reviving the sisterhood of Persephone but also of the women—mothers, sisters, daughters, and lovers—in the world around us. This collection reads like a novel that is part bildungsroman, part roman á clef, and forms, as a whole, the interior life of many real and imagined people, who are dealing both with love and with loss, all of which makes up a life. All I can say is that if you don’t laugh a little, if your eyes don’t well up in tears a little, if you don’t learn anything between these pages, I’ll have to “summon an ancient refrain”: “With the blues—no need to explain.”
—A. Van Jordan
Linda Susan Jackson’s Truth Be Told conjures these poems to bloom between the breaths of Toni Morrison’s text and ancient mythology. She sings us a drylongso meditation on Black womanhood in the cauldron of America’s blue-eyed blues. From this Truth, we learn how to navigate the space between fiction and myth on the perilous boat of poetry till we land winded and whole on homeland’s shore the way “A bird in the night / flies her song through the darkness— / tremolo in blues.”
—Tyehimba Jess
Notă biografică
Linda Susan Jackson is the author of What Yellow Sounds Like (Tia Chucha Press), a finalist for the National Poetry Series and the Paterson Prize and two chapbooks, Vitelline Blues and A History of Beauty, both published by Black-eyed Susan Publishing. She has received fellowships from the Cave Canem Foundation, the New York Foundation for the Arts, Calabash International Literary Festival, Soul Mountain Writers Retreat and The Frost Place. Her work has appeared in Brilliant Corners: A Journal of Jazz and Literature, Center for Book Arts Broadside Publications, Crab Orchard Review, Harvard Review, Heliotrope, Los Angeles Review, Mission at Tenth Inter-arts Journal, Obsidian: Literature of the African Diaspora, Ploughshares, and Rivendell, among others, and has been featured on The Academy of American Poets Poem-a-Day Series, and From the Fishouse. She’s a retired associate professor of English from Medgar Evers College/CUNY.
Extras
"Pecola’s Juggernaut"
Ugly is pretty
generic (there’s enough to go around),
a name flung from the mirror I duck
but I hear what it says: Your living
is complete defiance.
All of this was foretold in my history, shaped
by storefront living in my latchkey world.
My ugly is alive like a plague bred
on maternal distance & rage, on a father
itching to run & drowning in drink.
To be the ordinary ugly daughter
of a less than ordinary woman
is an accident that could have
crushed any girl & probably has.
Ugly is not my enemy, it’s my private
deity, demanding worship from a song
that wets the wasteland my dry
shocked voice has become, a song
that soars me off the ground
into the bluest sky
in my eye.
Ugly is pretty
generic (there’s enough to go around),
a name flung from the mirror I duck
but I hear what it says: Your living
is complete defiance.
All of this was foretold in my history, shaped
by storefront living in my latchkey world.
My ugly is alive like a plague bred
on maternal distance & rage, on a father
itching to run & drowning in drink.
To be the ordinary ugly daughter
of a less than ordinary woman
is an accident that could have
crushed any girl & probably has.
Ugly is not my enemy, it’s my private
deity, demanding worship from a song
that wets the wasteland my dry
shocked voice has become, a song
that soars me off the ground
into the bluest sky
in my eye.