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Resurrecting the Bones - by Jacinta V White (Paperback)

Resurrecting the Bones - by  Jacinta V White (Paperback)
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Last Price: 14.99 USD

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<p/><br></br><p><b> About the Book </b></p></br></br>"Poet Jacinta V White visited rural African American churches, from North Carolina to Texas, to learn more about her late father, who like his father was a preacher. Her journey led her to a deeper understanding of not only her father, but of her family and beyond"--<p/><br></br><p><b> Book Synopsis </b></p></br></br><p>Jacinta V. White's <em>Resurrecting The Bones</em> will not let southern African American history be silenced by re-zoning, gentrification, and useful forgetfulness. White's poems are Dr. Sheila Smith McKoy's "limbo time" in action. Each poem is a personal and historical guide through the richness and fullness of black southern culture and the mighty black church. White's language is hard-hitting, tender, and cosmic. Her images are sharp and unforgettable. The poems are narrative with a lyrical pulse that pulls the reader deeper into the rural landscape. A must read. --Tyree Daye</p><p/><br></br><p><b> Review Quotes </b></p></br></br><br><p><em>Resurrecting the Bones</em> is a divining rod guiding us past shores where ancestral ghosts have forgotten their names but still manage to write themselves home in between all the expressive lines in this collection. With a voice drawing its energy from an underrepresented perspective of religion and the black female body politic, Jacinta V. White offers the sharp notes of history, victimhood, and subjugation as a testament to the visceral injuries upon the backs and spirits of generations of African Americans. --Jaki Shelton Green, Poet Laureate of North Carolina</p><p>Part meditation, part prayer, and part act of resurrection, White's lush poetry evokes the complex interweaving of ancestry, praise, and everyday interaction that comprise black church life in the South. Her captivating lines demonstrate how the boundaries between the living and the dead, the church and the home, and violence and reverence, are inextricably bound in the African American experience. It is a family story and a deeply personal reflection on that history. --Laurie F. Maffly-Kipp, author of <em>Setting Down the Sacred Past: African American Race Histories, 1780-1920</em></p><p>Jacinta V. White offers us a glorious history of places and spaces that do more than reveal the nature of buildings and grounds. This work ushers readers into the feeling of these spaces by giving voice to the hopeful people who dwelled there. Ms. White still senses a rocking in the not-yet-rotten wooden planks on the floors of these old places of worship, places where so many genuflected in hope and walked with a dignified faith. A wondrous achievement! --Derek S. Hicks, author of <em>Reclaiming Spirit in the Black Faith Tradition</em>, and Associate Professor of Religion and Culture at Wake Forest University, School of Divinity</p><p>History, culture, place, space, religion, life, and death intermingle in these powerful, elegant, and rich poems. Whether read as research or simply for pleasure, this engaging collection is bound to transport and inspire you. --Patricia Leavy, Ph.D., author of <em>Method Meets Art</em> and <em>Spark</em></p><p>Jacinta V. White's <em>Resurrecting the Bones</em> will not let southern African American history be silenced by re-zoning, gentrification, and useful forgetfulness. White's poems are Dr. Sheila Smith McKoy's "limbo time" in action. Each poem is a personal and historical guide through the richness and fullness of black southern culture and the mighty black church. White's language is hard-hitting, tender, and cosmic. Her images are sharp and unforgettable. The poems are narrative with a lyrical pulse that pulls the reader deeper into the rural landscape. A must read! --Tyree Daye, author of <em>River Hymns</em>, winner of the 2017 APR/Honickman First Book Prize</p><br>

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