9780786716753
The days of good looks share button
Cheryl Clarke
Format Paperback
Dimensions 8.10 (w) x 5.50 (h) x 1.20 (d)
Pages 419
Publisher New York : Carroll & Graf Pub., c2006.
Publication Date 2005/12/20
ISBN 9780786716753
Book ISBN 10 0786716754
About Book

Lauded by luminaries such as Gwendolyn Brooks, Adrienne Rich, and Joy Harjo, among others, the work of African American lesbian poet Cheryl Clarke has spoken on behalf of the black, feminist and gay movements for more than 25 years. Her writing has earned her distinction as a contemporary black feminist icon in the tradition of June Jordan. In fact, few writers have tackled hot-button issues of race and sexuality with as much force or fearless humor as Clarke. The Days of Good Looks — her first new book of poetry in a decade — collects the author's most popular poems and essays along with an array of new unpublished writing.

Reviews

Publishers Weekly

Among the first and most prominent outspoken African-American lesbian feminists of the late 1970s and early 1980s, the intrepid Clarke has continued to publish essays and verse: this big volume (most of it prose) makes a good overview. The first section places six short early poems about women-identified women beside the prose pieces which first brought Clarke national fame: "Lesbianism: An Act of Resistance"; "Black, Brave and Woman, Too"; "The Failure to Transform: Homophobia in the Black Community." "Black women," the second of those essays predicted, "are on the brink of synthesizing the politics of women's liberation and the politics of black liberation for our own personal-is-political development." That synthesis, however, could not happen (and may not have happened yet) without including lesbians: "Being a Black lesbian is not easy, and the more non-middle-class, nonbourgeois elite the lesbian, the harder it is." Clarke's later essays and poems (many of the latter gathered under the group title "Living as a Lesbian") repeat and expand these insights, drawing humor, strength and righteous anger from the blues tradition: "Nothing I wouldn't do for the woman I sleep with/ when nobody satisfy me the way she do." (Feb.) Copyright 2005 Reed Business Information.