Glorious by Bernice L. McFadden, is available earlier on Amazon.com and BarnesandNoble.com. Move Glorious from your summer reading list to your spring break reading list. Switch Glorious to your April book club selection.
I was pleasantly suprised with an update email from Amazon.com. I pre-ordered the new book, Glorious, from writer Bernice L. McFadden expecting a May shipment. The shipment has been moved up to the last week of March. I can't help but think all the pre-orders prompted the distributor to release the book early. I very seldom pre-order. You don't get charged; however, I just always wait until the actual release date. Clicking that pre-order button along with other McFadden followers showed the publishers and distributors just how interested we are in high quality literature by African American women, particularly Bernice L. McFadden.
Reading Glorious? Join naki, Bernice L. McFadden's blog, goodreads.com and request to join "Vysvoice" bookclub.
Order your copy today.
Saturday, March 20, 2010
Monday, January 11, 2010
Reading King
We have reduced Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. to four words, "I Have A Dream".
As the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. National Holiday is celebrated this year, take some time to get to know the man and the movement behind those words.
Check out the Listmania list Essential Reading For A King on Goodreads.
As the Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. National Holiday is celebrated this year, take some time to get to know the man and the movement behind those words.
Check out the Listmania list Essential Reading For A King on Goodreads.
Saturday, January 9, 2010
To Move the Past or Not to Move the Past, That Is Question
The documentary, Moving Midway, will challenge your views of the legacy of slavery, the purpose of preservation, and the definition of family.
Watch the documentary with your family, book club, or preservation organization. We each have a unique vantage point based on our unique experiences, culture, background, geography, heritage, wealth, and sense of community.
Watch the documentary with your family, book club, or preservation organization. We each have a unique vantage point based on our unique experiences, culture, background, geography, heritage, wealth, and sense of community.
The Story Through Dance
Some of us tell stories using our words, some of us tell stories using the oils on canvas, some of us beat the drum and call out in song, gasping for another breath, holding onto a note until tears fall from the eyes of people who witness our telling.
Perhaps the most beautiful and powerful way to tell a story is through the art of dance. Arms, legs, and muscles move the air and we see heatwaves between people caught in a trance. Would the performers tell the story the same way if we were not watching? Are we voyers, peering in on the expressive interaction between dancers. The performance is intimate between the dancers. They really do not need us. We are the spectators. We are stopping to affect ourselves and be moved. We sit still in awe. The dancers sweat and exhaust themselves. We sit still in amazement trying to anticipate the next move asking ourselves who in our lives do we trust. Everyone will leave the performance affected. The dancers will know how hard they worked. The choreographer will want to change something to make it better. The audience will leave inspired.
Next Friday, I am attending the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company's production, Fondly Do We Hope...Fervently Do We Pray, at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill's Carolina Performing Arts Center.
I do not know what to expect. The production imagines a world "what if". If Lincoln had completed his second term in office, then what world would we have created? Fondly Do We Hope...Fervently Do We Pray imagines such a world.
In conjuction with the production is the exhibit, Jacob Lawrence and The Legend of John Brown, at the Ackland Art Museum.
How will I be affected? I will let you know after the performance.
Perhaps the most beautiful and powerful way to tell a story is through the art of dance. Arms, legs, and muscles move the air and we see heatwaves between people caught in a trance. Would the performers tell the story the same way if we were not watching? Are we voyers, peering in on the expressive interaction between dancers. The performance is intimate between the dancers. They really do not need us. We are the spectators. We are stopping to affect ourselves and be moved. We sit still in awe. The dancers sweat and exhaust themselves. We sit still in amazement trying to anticipate the next move asking ourselves who in our lives do we trust. Everyone will leave the performance affected. The dancers will know how hard they worked. The choreographer will want to change something to make it better. The audience will leave inspired.
Next Friday, I am attending the Bill T. Jones/Arnie Zane Dance Company's production, Fondly Do We Hope...Fervently Do We Pray, at University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill's Carolina Performing Arts Center.
I do not know what to expect. The production imagines a world "what if". If Lincoln had completed his second term in office, then what world would we have created? Fondly Do We Hope...Fervently Do We Pray imagines such a world.
In conjuction with the production is the exhibit, Jacob Lawrence and The Legend of John Brown, at the Ackland Art Museum.
How will I be affected? I will let you know after the performance.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)