Wounded in the House of a Friend
by Sonia Sanchez
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Narrative poetry, haiku, and African-American lyricism confront the themes of race and gender and explore a granddaughter's drug addiction, a husband's infidelity, and a rape focusing on bringing hope and healing out of painful situations.Tags
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23+ Works 968 Members
Born in Alabama, educated in New York City, Sanchez is a leading poet of the Black Arts Movement, whose poetry is written from political, economic, and social concerns as well as literary ones. Although her literary focus has been primarily to express her experience as an African American woman, Sanchez claims, "if you write from a black show more experience, you're writing from a universal experience as well." Sanchez's poems are direct, colloquial, and often militant. Many of her works are for children, such as her "poems for young brothas and sistuhs," as she puts it in It's a New Day (1971). Yet she also writes with tenderness about love. As academic interest in the voices of women and African Americans has intensified, critical interest in and acceptance of Sanchez's work has increased. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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