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The Homeplace

The Homeplace

List Price: $16.95
Your Price: $16.95
Product Info Reviews

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Rating: 4 stars
Summary: A Story in Poems
Review: In The Homeplace, Marilyn Nelson's third book, the author writes about members of her family. In the first part, poems describe the lives of her maternal ancestors going back five generations. The second part focuses on her father and his colleagues, the first black members of the Air Force. Though individual poems are capable of standing alone, the collection chronicles the history of American race relations, from Diverne, a slave, to Pomp, who lives with the stigma of his mixed blood immediately following the Civil War, to the Tuskegee Airmen, who must repeatedly handle skepticism about their abilities. Individual poems describe anecdotes, little moments in these lives, sometimes told in the first person and sometimes in third. The general sense creates a quilt of such moments, with individual poems contributing to the whole.

Rating: 5 stars
Summary: one of the best volumes of contemporary poetry
Review: There is no doubt in my mind that Marilyn Nelson's poetry will be remembered for generations to come, and this collection, _The Homeplace_ (which was a finalist for the National Book Award), is the primary reason why. Nelson's poetry is good by any standards, but _The Homeplace_ stands head and shoulders above her work, which says quite a bit. I've read her new and selected poems. They were very good. The only complaint is that they weren't divided by volumes, so it wasn't until i picked up _The Homeplace_ and read it that I realized just how good the poems in this volume are. Because _The Homeplace_ isn't a collection of short poems, rather it is one long narrative poem. It's divided into two sections. Section I tells the story of her mother's side of the family, going back five generations to her great-great grandmother, Diverne. The story of this family goes through slavery, the turn of the century, wars, and up to the point where her mother and father meet. It's a heroic and touching story. Section II is the story of her father's time as WWII as a Tuskegee Airman. _The Homeplace_ contains everything good about poetry, and everything that poetry should be: story, form, meaning, love, and a wonderful use of language. This isn't a book you should pass over. It should be read--slowly and again and again.


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