What My Hand Say

· Press 53 · Kuchazwe ngu-Andia Winslow
5.0
1 isibuyekezo
I-audiobook
2 ihora 13 iminithi
Okungavamile
Kufanelekile
Izilinganiso nezibuyekezo aziqinisekisiwe  Funda Kabanzi
Ufuna isampula elingu-9 iminithi? Lalela noma kunini, nanoma ungaxhunyiwe ku-inthanethi. 
Engeza

Mayelana nale audiobook

What My Hand Say, on one hand is a bold unapologetic tribute of black people living their lives
in South Carolina. While on other hand, it is a palpable reckoning with the state’s weighted
history. In this book, Glenis Redmond’s poems span from the 1800s to the present. The impact
of going from poem to poem purposely causes emotional whiplash, as if to say welcome to the
volatile place, in which “I/we have always had to live.”

Izilinganiso nezibuyekezo

5.0
1 isibuyekezo

Mayelana nomlobi

Glenis Redmond travels nationally and internationally reading and teaching poetry so much that she has earned the title, Road Warrior Poet. She has recently been awarded the highest award for the Arts in the state of South Carolina, The Elizabeth O'Neill Verner Award. Also, she will receive the "Charlie Award," given in memory of Charles Price granted by the Carolina Mountains Literary Festival in the Fall of 2020In 2014-19, Glenis has served as the Mentor Poet for the National Student Poet's Program to prepare students to read at the Library of Congress, the Department of Education, and for First Lady Michelle Obama at The White House. The students now read at the Library of Congress. Author and T&W Board member Tayari Jones selected Glenis Redmond's essay, "Poetry as a Mirror," as the runner-up for the 2018 Bechtel Prize. Teachers & Writers Collaborative awards the annual Bechtel Prize to the author of an essay that explores themes related to creative writing, arts education, and/or the imagination. Glenis is a Cave Canem Fellow, a North Carolina Literary Fellowship Recipient, and a Kennedy Center Teaching Artist. She also helped create the first Writer-in-Residence at the Carl Sandburg Home National Historic Site in Flat Rock, North Carolina. Redmond's "Dreams Speak: My Father's Words" was chosen for third place for the North Carolina Literary Review's James Applewhite Prize and "Sketch," "Every One of My Names," and "House: Another Kind of Field will be published in NCLR in 2019. These poems are about -Harriet Tubman, the most famous conductor of the underground railroad; Harriet Jacobs, who escaped from slavery and became an abolitionist, and the author of Incidents in the Life of a Slave Girl; and Harriet E. Wilson, who was held as an indentured servant in the North and went on to become an important novelist, businesswoman, and religious speaker.Glenis believes that poetry is a healer, and she can be found in the trenches across the world applying pressure to those in need, one poem at a time.

Linganisela le-audiobook

Sitshele ukuthi ucabangani.

Ulwazi lokulalela

Amasmathifoni namathebulethi
Faka uhlelo lokusebenza lwe-Google Play Amabhuku lwe-Android ne-iPad/iPhone. Livunyelaniswa ngokuzenzakalela ne-akhawunti yakho liphinde likuvumele ukuthi ufunde uxhunywe ku-inthanethi noma ungaxhunyiwe noma ngabe ukuphi.
Amakhompyutha aphathekayo namakhompyutha
Ungafunda amabhuku athengwe ku-Google Play usebenzisa isiphequluli sewebhu kukhompyutha yakho.