When you learn the alphabet

Kendra Allen, 1994-

Book - 2019

"Kendra Allen's first collection of essays When You Learn the Alphabet--at its core--is a bunch of mad stories about things she never learned to let go of. Unifying personal narrative and cultural commentary, this collection grapples with the lessons that have been stored between father and daughter as well as mother and daughter. These parental relationships expose the conditioning that subconsciously informed and encouraged her ideas on social issues such as colorism, feminism, war-induced PTSD, homophobia, marriage, and 'the n-word, ' among other things"--

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Subjects
Genres
Essays
Published
Iowa City : University of Iowa Press [2019]
Language
English
Main Author
Kendra Allen, 1994- (author)
Physical Description
149 pages ; 21 cm
Awards
"Winner of the Iowa Prize for Literary Nonfiction."
ISBN
9781609386290
  • Dark Girls
  • About American Marriages
  • When You Learn the Alphabet
  • Father Can You Hear Me
  • The Bitch Had Discipline
  • Legs on His Shoulders
  • For Sale, Sometimes for Free
  • Citizens Take Out the Trash
  • Full Service
  • How to Workshop N-Words
  • Polar Bear Express
  • Boy Is a White Racist Word
  • Don't Gaslight the Moonlight
  • The Beautiful Ones Always Smash the Picture
  • Dear Life
  • Skin Cracks, Blood Spills
  • Mama Said on Motherhood
  • The Cheapest Casket
  • Bombs on Fire
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Winner of the 2018 Iowa Prize for Literary Nonfiction, a slender book that moves across genresblended poetry and prose, memoir, journal, academic and personal essayto speak of life as a young African-American woman."People who love me but not my skin tell me at least I'm a pretty dark-skinned girl, an insult as salutation," Allen writes of the layers of her experience and the larger African-American experience, from surface appearances ("they do not see caramel, yella bones, creole, good hair, bad hair.They don't see chocolate, bleaching creams, sunscreens, brown skin, light skin, they just see African") to family dynamics to the power of words. A standout piece on the last matter is her essay "How to Workshop N-Words," which should be required reading for writing instructors everywhere: She writes of the self-satisfaction of nonblack professors assigning texts by black writers who "taught them something about their whiteness" and the inevitable moment in which the N-word arises. "It just doesn't sound good," she writes. Collective conditioning, collective guilt, respectability politics, institutional racism: Though only 10 pages long, the essay packs a lot of punch into a short space, and with luck it will produce at least some of the desired effect of lessening the use of a word that, Allen writes, produces "an instantly unstable, volatile feeling." The author turns the lens on herself when examining the fraught place of gayness in the African-American community, confessing to comfortable accession to "straight privilege" and challenging those who "have used God as a rationalization for their made up minds all their lives." Some of the pieces are less consequential, among them a notebook-ish account of a visit to Paris, but most are memorable indeed: "We all stay broken," she writes in one essay, "and are all good at breaking."A promising debut from a writer with much to say. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.