Review by Booklist Review
The continuing importance of author and activist June Jordan is on full display in this collection of poems and essays. With contributions by literary luminaries, including Imani Perry and Alexis Pauline Gumbs, this volume examines and celebrates Jordan's life and work. Jordan's experiences, creative process, and artistic aims are revealed from the perspectives of people who knew and collaborated with her, including her friend and contemporary, Angela Davis, who says, "June helped me understand that creating the collective can also happen in the process of producing art. June's art, her poetry, was saturated with the sense of the power of masses of people." Jordan touched the lives and minds of countless other creatives and, alongside the reminiscences of those who knew her, are poems that illustrate how deeply her influence is still felt. As Wesley Brown writes in his essay revisiting Jordan's poem "On New Year's Eve:" "So, as we stagger into the 2020s, unable to see for looking, we are in desperate need of rekindling our attention to the writing of June Jordan to remind us that the national sickness we are experiencing at the present moment is not an aberration. And her words, having been indispensable to us while she was physically in our midst, are equally important now." An essential library title.
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Homage to a beloved poet. This compendium of 38 essays, letters, and poems honors the poet, essayist, and activist June Jordan (1936-2002) with contributions from Jordan's friends and students and the many educators and activists to whom she bequeathed a legacy of love: "an opportunity to love ourselves and each other more honestly." Many, like Thompson, involved in grassroots activism, found inspiration in Jordan's energy. "She lived her life," Thompson writes, "as if it were a rushing river, with inlets for rest, and rapids where she insisted that she and all those she was around hold on for dear life." Jordan's political engagement reflected her deep empathy; poet E. Ethelbert Miller points to lines written in response to the Israeli bombing of Lebanon in 1982: "I was born a Black woman," Jordan wrote, "and now / I am become a Palestinian." Her students attest to her generosity and encouragement. In her Poetry for the People class at UC Berkeley, students used Jordan's "Guidelines for Critiquing a Poem" as a framework, a piece that several educators cite as an influence in their own teaching. For Jordan, poetry was art, craft, and a way of being in the world. As Xochiquetzal Candelaria recalls, "She described writing poetry as being like wrestling with an angel, letting us know that we were going to lose, but that the experience was blessed and transformational." Interviewed about their relationship with Jordan, Angela Davis and British filmmaker Pratibha Parmar remember that after meeting her in Paris, they received on their breakfast tray a poem, "Solidarity," celebrating their new friendship. A sense of solidarity informed Jordan's life. She was compassionate, Davis recalls, "and felt deeply for everyone undergoing any form of oppression." A deeply felt memorial. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.