Breath better spent Living Black girlhood

DaMaris B. Hill

Book - 2022

"Through the eyes and stories of prominent Black female figures from Zora Neale Hurston to Riley Curry and Michelle Obama, and with an homage to Toni Morrison's Beloved, Breath Better Spent beautifully and trenchantly captures the culture of Black girlhood and its changing relationship to American culture, exploring the highly visible and invisible spaces that Black girls occupy, from school, to home, to others' imaginations, and proceeds to question the disappearance - metaphorically and literally - of Black girls from the American imagination. Powerfully drawing on both history and her own experiences, Hill brings to life the vitality, creativity, and strength of Black girlhood while shining a light on a crisis we cannot ig...nore"--

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Subjects
Genres
Narrative poetry
Published
New York : Bloomsbury Publishing 2022.
Language
English
Main Author
DaMaris B. Hill (author)
Physical Description
xxiv, 149 pages : illustrations ; 22 cm
Bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (pages 143-145).
ISBN
9781635576474
  • Preface
  • ***
  • Black Girl Genius: The Histories
  • Speaking in Tongues
  • Jarena Lee: A Platypus in a Petticoat
  • Beloved Weirdo
  • The Birth of Ma
  • Ella Baker at the Ballot
  • "Never Grow Old"
  • Someone for Me
  • Only Boys Have Fans
  • Twice-Born Girl
  • What You Talking 'Bout
  • Glutton
  • Those Sunless Summer Mornings
  • Hotter Than July
  • Sign o' the Times
  • Grace for Be'la Dona
  • Dodge City Girls
  • Still Scary
  • How the Tongue Holds
  • Sage Poets and Popstars
  • Continuous Fire
  • In the Wilderness
  • Wasting Her Lips
  • Born Again and Again
  • Never Grow Old: Part Two
  • Gristle
  • In Search of the Colored Girl
  • The Gypsy Girl Gets No Solitude
  • Nevaeh Adams and Sharee Bradley (Nevaeh's Mother)
  • Kamille "Cupcake" McKinney
  • For All of Birmingham's Baby Girls
  • Aniah Blanchard
  • Dear Christians of Alabama
  • Anitra Gunn
  • Kimberly Grisham
  • Aziya Roberts #WeWalkForHer
  • The Psalm of TeNiya Jones
  • Homeroom
  • Tendayi's Blues
  • ***
  • Baiting Boys
  • New Year's Day 2021
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Not a Story
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Premonition One
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Premonition Two
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Who Is Criminal?
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Premonition Three
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Premonition Four
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Waifs and Wanting
  • #BringBackOurGirls-Mama's Boy?
  • ***
  • Acknowledgments
  • Citations
  • Photo Credits
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

Hill (A Bound Woman Is a Dangerous Thing) combines in this urgent collection photographs and essays that capture the lives of young Black women and girls past, present, and future. Per Hill's luminous preface, "These poems explore the interior and public lives of Black girls, the visible... and invisible spaces... that Black girls occupy in American culture." She draws on history, memory, and conversations to present a range of perspectives and experiences. Between sparkling homages to famous Black women like Aretha Franklin ("Your voice is/ caramel, lush, wet and warm star-kissed/ sugar around everyone's soul") and poems that proclaim and mourn the loss of missing and murdered Black girls ("You are a missing person./ You, Nevaeh , and your mother are diamond/ reflections in a fancy compact mirror"), Hill situates her own reckoning with Black girlhood. "Little Wonder," she writes in "Continuous Fire (a love poem to a younger self)," "water cheerleader wannabe,/ may I fashion you a throne?/ May I carry you on my shoulders/ as I praise you with my pen?" Hill fulfills this mission, and readers are lucky to be with her in these outstanding pages. (Jan.)

(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review

Poems and essays on Black girlhood, as seen through the lens of the author's personal experiences and reflections. In the preface, Hill states her intentions clearly: "In this book, I am telling you a story illustrated in pieces of my heart and fragments from my mirror." She also addresses urgent questions: "What does the active love and protection of Black girls look like in 'America' and in a time when extreme oppression and violence is stimulated? I do not pretend to know the answers to this. What I know is some patchwork and remix of stories, inclinations, and experiences of Black girlhood. Stories are the treasures I own. They are what belongs to me." The author's deep love for and desire to amplify the experiences of Black girls and women, including her own, are evident. Unfortunately, the collection lacks clear entry points for readers to glean unifying themes and distinct observations from within the patchwork. Some of the poems pay homage to a diverse collective of iconic and trailblazing women, including Jarena Lee, Harriet Jacobs, Ella Baker, Whitney Houston, and Aretha Franklin; black-and-white photos of these icons, the author, and others accompany the poems. Throughout the collection, the poems, individually and collectively, feel like fragments. Potentially resonant moments are fleeting because Hill's images, memories, and phrases often feel random and disparate rather than evocative. An elegiac section titled "In Search of the Colored Girl" memorializes missing, murdered, and forgotten Black girls and women. These poems are the most cogent in the collection but are still somewhat disorienting. Similarly, some of the essays interspersed among the poems feel unfinished and, at times, disjointed. Despite its problems, the book is validating in its intentions and may be useful in further study of the complexities and traumas of being Black in America. Earnest and inspired but doesn't deliver a compelling meditation on Black girlhood. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.

Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.