From Library Journal
Dove is a prolific poet whose honors include the Pulitzer Prize and her present appointment as Poet Laureate of the United States (she is the youngest poet and the only African American to have held this post). This book includes poems from her first three books. A prose introduction by the author about becoming a writer ends with a recent autobiographical poem, "In the Old Neighborhood," which reiterates in powerful images the concern with self-definition and history in the older poems. Of strawberries, she writes, "Mom sliced the red hearts into sugar/ and left them to build their own/ improbable juice." Indeed, the personal narrative, both contemporary and historical, drives these poems; full of observed detail, they are shaped by huge events--birth, death, hardship, racism, politics: "No front yard to speak of/just a porch cantilevered on faith." "Thomas and Beulah," the magnificent narrative sequence based on Dove's grandparents' lives, is included in its entirety. Essential.
- Ellen Kaufman, Dewey Ballantine Law Lib., New YorkCopyright 1993 Reed Business Information, Inc.
Celebrating the ascension of the first African American to the position of poet laureate of the United States, this volume places three previous collections under one cover--all of Dove's work with the exception of the recent, fine
Grace Notes (1989). The selection begins with
The Yellow House on the Corner, Dove's first book, most notable for its poems derived from slave narratives.
Museum, her second book, offers a potpourri of work that ranges over several continents and many millenia; Dove's tirelessly exact language illuminates the lives of saints, contemporary lifestyles, and Greek myths. Finally, the Pulitzer Prize-winning
Thomas and Beulah offers slices of African American life from the early part of the century; like a patchwork quilt, its many pieces form a stunning ensemble. An excellent gathering of an important poet's work.
Pat Monaghan