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Photo © Joyce Middler
(March 25, 1939 - December 9, 1995)
Toni Cade
Bambara, born Miltona Mirkin Cade on March 25, 1939,
lived the first ten years of her life in Harlem.
Toni Cade Bambara was a writer,
activist, feminist, and filmmaker. In 1982, in a taped
interview with Kay Bonetti, Bambara reflected on her
work: "When I look back at my work with any little
distance the two characteristics that jump out at me is
one, the tremendous capacity for laughter, but also a
tremendous capacity for rage." Bambara spent her
entire life writing about both. Her ability to laugh and
imbue laughter into her stories came from her strong
conviction and belief in family and community. Her rage
came from the injustices she saw in the treatment of
children, the elderly, and the oppressed black community
bio excerpted from
University of Minnesota. All rights reserved read full
in depth citation at
http://voices.cla.umn.edu/vg/Bios/entries/bambara_toni_cade.html |
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Deep Sightings & Rescue Missions
Fiction, Essays, and Conversations
Click to order via
Amazon
Paperback: 272 pages
Publisher: Vintage; 1st Vintage Contemporaries
Ed edition (January 26, 1999)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0679774076
This compilation of selected short fiction,
essays and interviews by (and with) the late
Bambara (The Salt Eaters) is her first published
work in 14 years, and it provides intriguing
insights into this challenging African American
writer. The collection includes a warm,
appreciative preface by Nobel laureate Toni
Morrison, who also edited this volume. The six
stories feature characters who seek
self-definition through their relationships with
others: in "Going Critical," a mother slowly
dying from radiation poisoning reflects on her
relationship with her daughter during a day at
the beach; and two boys are puzzled by the
community's warm reception of a painter who
transforms their favorite landmark and play area
in "The War of the Wall." The second section
features Bambara's voice much more clearly, as
she tackles discursively the social and
political concerns, often about race and gender,
that animate her fiction. Her film criticism is
especially trenchant: she discusses
blaxploitation films of the 1960s and '70s,
Julie Dash's Daughters of the Dust and Spike
Lee's School Daze with a sharp eye for their
complexity, message and vision. She also
questions the assumptions behind our daily
language, provoking readers to think in more
complicated terms. Bambara (1939-1995) never
made any bones about the fact that she viewed
writing as a political act. The writings
collected here show that, unlike many others,
she rarely let her activist motives cripple her
aesthetic sense or her intellectual honesty.
Copyright 1996 Reed Business Information, Inc.
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Gorilla, My Love
Click to order via
AmazonPaperback: 192
pages
Publisher: Vintage (June 30, 1992)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0679738983
In these fifteen superb stories, written in a style at
once ineffable and immediately recognizable, Toni Cade
Bambara gives us compelling portraits of a wide range of
unforgettable characters, from sassy children to cunning old
men, in scenes shifting between uptown New York and rural
North CaroLina. A young girl suffers her first betrayal. A
widow flirts with an elderly blind man against the wishes of
her grown-up children. A neighborhood loan shark teaches o
white social worker a lesson in responsibility. And there is
more. Sharing the world of Toni Cade Bambara's "straight-up
fiction" is a stunning experience. |
The Salt Eaters
Click to order via
AmazonPaperback: 304
pages
Publisher: Vintage (June 30, 1992)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0679740767
Set in Claybourne, a small town somewhere in the South,
THE SALT EATERS is the story of a community of black faith
healers who, searching for the healing properties of salt,
witness an event that will change their lives forever. |
Those Bones Are Not
My Child
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AmazonPaperback: 688
pages
Publisher: Vintage (October 24, 2000)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0679774084
On a Friday night in July 1979, the first victim in what
would come to be called the Atlanta Child Murders
disappeared. Over the course of two years, more than 40
African American children would die--abused, mutilated,
strangled--before an arrest in 1981 apparently settled the
issue. Wayne Williams, a black man, was accused, tried, and
convicted of the murders, and the good citizens of Atlanta
breathed easy again, assured that the crimes had not been
racially motivated after all, and that the criminal was
behind bars.
Or was he? In her posthumously published novel, Those
Bones Are Not My Child, Toni Cade Bambara revisits the
summer of 1980 and suggests a chilling alternative:
The terror is over, the authorities say. The horror
is past, they repeat every day. There've been no new
cases of kidnap and murder since the arrest back in
June. You've good reason to know that the official line
is a lie. But you sweep the walk briskly all the way to
the hedge, as though in clearing the leaves you can
clear from your mind all that you know. You'd truly like
to know less. You want to believe. It is 3:23 on your
Mother's Day watch. And your child is nowhere in sight.
The protagonist of Bambara's novel is Marzala Rawls
Spencer, an African American mother of three who is
managing--just--to raise her family, hold down three jobs,
and attend night school. When her 12-year-old son, Sundiata,
doesn't return from a camping trip, Zala finds herself
plunged into the nightmarish possibility that he has become
the latest victim in the series of murders rocking the "City
Too Busy to Hate." As she and her estranged husband, Spence,
frantically attempt to discover what has happened to their
child, the book takes them through the complicated morass of
politics, race relations, and class that bedevil
Atlanta--and perhaps obstruct the search for the true
killer.
Bambara worked on Those Bones Are Not My Child for 12
years before her death in 1995. Toni Morrison edited the
manuscript for publication, and though the occasional rough
edge shows through, the well-drawn characters and inherent
human drama in this stranger-than-fiction tale overcome its
minor weaknesses. This is the novel Toni Cade Bambara will
be remembered for, and rightly so.
Amazon.com
(Alix Wilber)
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The
Black Woman: An Anthology
Click to order via
Amazonedited
by Toni Cade Bambara
Paperback
Publisher: Washington Square Press (March
29, 2005)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 0743476972
When it was first published in 1970,
The Black Woman introduced readers to an
astonishing new wave of voices that demanded
to be heard. In this groundbreaking volume
of original essays, poems, and stories, a
chorus of outspoken women -- many who would
become leaders in their fields: bestselling
novelist
Alice Walker, poets
Audre Lorde and
Nikki Giovanni, writer
Paule Marshall, activist Grace Lee
Boggs, and musician Abbey Lincoln among them
-- tackled issues surrounding race and sex,
body image, the economy, politics, labor,
and much more. Their words still resonate
with truth, relevance, and insight today.
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