9781576010075
At Our Core share button
Sandra Martz
Format Paperback
Dimensions 7.01 (w) x 9.24 (h) x 0.58 (d)
Pages 216
Publisher Moyer Bell
Publication Date January 2010
ISBN 9781576010075
Book ISBN 10 1576010074
About Book

Sandra Haldeman Martz — whose bestselling anthology series celebrating women's lives brought us I Am Becoming the Woman I've Wanted (winner of a 1995 American Book Award) and If I Had a Hammer: Women's Work — explores another profound issue for women: our concept of power in our lives. At Our Core: Women Writing about Power articulates the awesome breadth and subtlety of what power means to women.

These stories, poems, and photographs convey the phenomenon of women being in control of their own lives. We know these women — some of whom have been hurt physically, emotionally, or spiritually — who yearn to be understood, to be allowed to participate as equals, to live each day with peace.

Breathtakingly honest and courageous, these voices honor and validate women's uniquely personal definitions of power. Women will cry and rejoice at the searing beauty of these intimately familiar stories.

Reviews

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

Martz has made an industry out of editing and publishing affirming anthologies geared toward baby-boomer feminists (including the American Book Award-winning I Am Becoming the Woman I've Wanted). Her latest effort follows the familiar format of its predecessors, collecting essays, fiction, poetry and photography from a diverse pool of women. This time the theme is power (personal power, spiritual power, physical power, etc.), and the collection is likely to remind readers of Robin Morgan's trailblazing Sisterhood Is Powerful. Too many of the contributors lean on predictable pieties, as Sharon Nelson does in her poem "Silencing": "A woman writer, simply by virtue of being a woman and a writer,/ is a renegade and a subversive." Some, however, bite with irony, as do Lillian Nattel in "Biology is Destiny" and Honore Fanonne Jeffers in her delicious poem (whose title encompasses 11 lines), "A Haiku for Mr. Louis Farrakhan..." Not surprisingly, given the spacious premise of the anthology, the contributions are all over the map. Yet at its strongest, Martz's collection will interest readers by virtue of its very eclecticism, a fact Martz seems to acknowledge in her introduction: "After two years of reading more than 4000 submissions... I don't have definitive answers but I am more intrigued than ever with the questions." 50,000 first printing; $50,000 ad/promo; editor and contributor tours. (Mar.)