Good Woman: Poems and a Memoir 1969-1980 (American Poets Continuum)
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Average customer review:Product Description
large volume of poems plus a personal memoir
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #127376 in Books
- Published on: 1987-11-01
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 276 pages
Editorial Reviews
Amazon.com Review
My favorite book, this is a must-have poetry collection for both poetry lovers and those who like to think but aren't comfortable with the density of some contemporary poetry. Clifton, as always, uses language that is accessible to craft situations real and vital to her readers. The section "Some Jesus" probes the emotions of plain folks faced with miracles; "Good Times" takes its own snapshots of family in days past; "I Agree with the Leaves" explores the curious and troubling realms of spirituality and the quest for "place" in the cosmos. Good Woman is a fine companion to Clifton's most recent book The Terrible Stories.
Review
The 1st
The 70's
Adam And Eve
Admonitions
Africa
After Kent State
Angels
Anna Speaks Of The Childhood Of Mary Her Daughter
Apology
The Astrologer Predicts At Mary's Birth
At Last We Killed The Roaches
August The 12th
Aunt Agnes Hatcher Tells
Being Property Once Myself
The Bodies Broken On
Breaklight
Buffalo War
Ca'line's Prayer
Cain
The Calling Of The Disciples
Calming Kali
The Carver
Come Home From The Movies
The Coming Of Kali
Confession
Conversation With My Grandson, Waiting To Be Conceived
Cutting Greens
Daddy
Daniel
The Discoveries Of Fire
Driving Through New England
Earth
Easter Sunday
Eldridge
Explanations
February 13,1980
Flowers
For Delawd
For Her Hiding Place
For The Bird Who Flew Against Our Window One Morning
For The Blind
For The Lame
For The Mad
For The Mute
Forgiving My Father
Friends Come
Generations
God Send Easter
God Waits For The Wandering World
God's Mood
Good Friday
Good Times
Harriet
Her Love Poem
Holy Night
Homage To My Hair
Homage To My Hips
How Is He Coming Then
I Am High On The Man Called Crazy
I Am Not Done Yet
I Am Running Into A New Year
I Once Knew A Man Who Had Wild Horses Killed
I Was Born In A Hotel
I Was Born With Twelve Fingers
I Went To The Valley
If He Ask You Was I Laughing
If I Stand In My Window
If Mama
If Something Should Happen
In Populated Air
In Salem
In The Evenings
In The Inner City
In This Garden
Incandescence
Island Mary
Jackie Robinson
Job
John
Jonah
Joseph
Kali
The Kind Of Man He Is
Lane Is The Pretty One
Last Note To My Girls
Lately
Later I'll Say
Leanna's Poem
The Lesson Of The Falling Leaves
Let There Be New Flowering
The Light That Came To Lucille Clifton
Light
Listen Children
The Lost Baby Poem
Love Rejected
Lucy And Her Girls
Lucy One-eye
The Making Of Poems
Malcolm
Mary
Mary Mary Astonished By God
Mary's Dream
The Meeting After The Savior Gone
Monticello
More Than Once
Moses
Mother, I Am Mad
My Boys
My Daddy's Fingers Move Among The Couplers
My Friends
My Mama Moved Among The Days
My Poem
The Mystery That Surely Is Present
New Bones
New Year
The News
Now My First Wife Never Did Come Out Of Her Room
On The Birth Of Bomani
On The Death Of Allen's Son
The Once And Future Dead
Palm Sunday
Perhaps
Pity This Poor Animal
Poem For My Sisters
Poem On My Fortieth Birthday To My Mother Who Died Young
The Poet
Pork Chops
Prayer
The Raising Of Lazarus
Richard Penniman
Robert
Roots
Running Across To The Lot
Salt
She Insists On Me
She Is Dreaming
She Understands Me
Sisters
So Close
Solomon
Some Dreams Hang In The Air
Song
A Song Of Mary
Sonora Desert Poem
Speaking Of Loss
Spring Song
Still
Stops
A Storm Poem
Testament
There Is A Girl Inside
The Thirty Eigth Year
This Morning
Those Boys That Ran Together
To A Dark Moses
To Bobby Seale
To Joan
To Merle
To Ms. Ann
To The Unborn And Waiting Children
To Thelma Who Worried Because I Couldn't Cook
Turning
Tyrone (1)
Tyrone (2)
Tyrone (3)
Tyrone (4)
A Visit To Gettysburg
The Way It Was
The Way It Was
What The Mirror Said
The White Boy
Wife
Willie B (1)
Willie B (2)
Willie B (3)
Willie B (4)
Wise: Having The Ability To Perceive And Adopt The Best
-- Table of Poems from Poem Finder®
About the Author
Lucille Clifton won the 2007 Ruth Lilly Poetry Award. Her book, Blessing the Boats (BOA Editions), won the 2000 National Book Award for Poetry. Two of Clifton's BOA poetry collections were chosen as finalists for the Pulitzer Prize in 1988. Clifton's awards include fellowships from the National Endowment for the Arts and an Emmy Award.
Customer Reviews
Moving, mesmerizing, revealing, touching, earthy, and lovely
I love reading Lucille Clifton's poetry. I get a real sense of her person, her pain, her history. Some poems are so moving, I can't help but cry. I am stunned to find such fine wording, the way she knows just what word to use. Some of her word choices are unusual....they're not a way that one would have thought of that word, but in the context of the poem, the word finds a home, makes sense. Additionally, she expresses her appreciation of the earth in almost religious terms; her exploration of religion in her poetry is extremely appealing to me. She seems to have a sense of appreciation for, and sympathetic understanding of, the characters (Job, Moses especially) in the Bible, I feel closer to them myself when viewing them through her eyes. I like this book also because you feel the strength of the woman behind the words, she's wise, she's had her pain, but she's able to celebrate those things in life that are worth celebrating -- love, family, simple pleasures and even her own hair and hips. I love too many poems to list here, but you should go to your library and read these poems; even if you don't buy the book, these poems should find a place in your life: Salt, The Lesson of the Falling Leaves, Mary, Cutting Greens....so many more. I hope you enjoy them as much as I did.
Quiet, meditative, moving...
Lucille Clifton has always been one of my favorite poets. Her accessible poetry captures in moving, eloquent verse living in the world. Her unique voice speaks in language that is not unnecessarily dense and "cerebral": an especially desirable trait given the frequently written complaint regarding lack of readership for modern poetry. Lucille Clifton writes poetry we ALL can relate to, not just the academics and, to be a little unkind, poetry "snobs". Recommended highly.
THis book is about my family
Lucille Clifton is my aunt, my father's sister. However, my father was absent, so to me, this book is more than a collection of poems or casual redaing but a true gift of my own family history in black and white, a history that I wasn't aware of. Now that I it has given me strength. My friends and I summon up my aunt's namesake, the ORIGINAL Lucille (!)anytime we need to lay down the law! Thank you Aunt Lucille for your gift and for this gift to me.




