Front Page
asheville news
GATEWAY TO THE MULTICULTURAL COMMUNITY
Tuesday, 07 February 2012
Increasing Clouds Today: Increasing Clouds
55°F | 34°F
button.png
Book Bag: Stories Trace Powerful Ties to African Motherlands E-mail

adichie_jacke.jpgreviews by Sharon Shervington

The Thing Around Your Neck
Written by Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie

This collection of 12 short stories, like the author’s two novels, has won wide critical acclaim here and abroad. At first glance one might imagine the title story is about that peculiar type of torture in Africa called “the necklace,” but that is not so. It is a strange love story about a young woman who comes to America only to have her dreams shattered. Then she meets a man and her life changes again. Whether Ms. Adichie is talking about familial love, crime and the tragedy that has followed in the wake of political catastrophe in Nigeria, or the varied difficulties Nigerian women experience in coming to America, Ms. Adichie has the ability to shine a bright beam of light into the lives of people we might otherwise never know about. Even readers who don’t generally like short stories will find these complicated yet always complete gems captivating. A sequel by this winner of a 2008 MacArthur Foundation Fellowship would be welcome.

Knopf, 218 pages $24.95

A Princess Found –
An American Family, an African Chiefdom, and the Daughter Who Connected Them All
Written by Sarah Culberson and Tracy Trivas

princessfound_final.jpgSarah Culberson grew up in West Virginia in a close and loving family. But when the time was right, and she was still quite small, her white parents revealed to her that she was adopted. For a long time that didn’t matter to the star athlete and homecoming queen. But, at least in part because her golden skin and kinky hair marked her as an outsider in the very white community where she was reared, she needed to know more. The first part of the book alternates chapters on her early life with horrific ones about what happened to her blood family during the civil war in Sierra Leone in the 1990s.

Fortunately, her adoptive parents had prepared well for the moment when Sarah would come to them, searching for herself. Eventually, she meets the families of her white mother (who was deceased) and of her black father, many of whom had immigrated to the U.S. But the bulk of the book follows Sarah to Sierra Leone where she meets her father and extended family. Though beautiful, it is like another world, without even running water. The war has destroyed everything the family had including the school where her father was principal. The story of how Culberson helps them with a foundation she founds and a steadfast commitment to this very different family is just lovely.

St. Martin’s Press, 351 pages, $25.99

nelsonmandelacomicbook.jpgNelson Mandela: The Authorized Comic Book
By the Nelson Mandela Foundation with Umlando Wezithombe

Nelson Mandela is the kind of personal and political leader and hero whose life will inspire people for years, if not centuries, to come. This homage to Mr. Mandela begins with his childhood, his many adventures and the early direct impact that the white supremacist government had on his proud family. In fact when he was quite young, the family was forced off its rich land. His education as a lawyer, his life with Winnie and his heroic transformation from prisoner to president are all here in this beautifully wrought “comic book.”  

W.W. Norton & Company, 193 pages, $27.95

  No Comments.
Discuss...
< Prev   Next >
Arts & EntertainmentInternational Ambassador of Hip-Hop, Rennie Harris Puremovement

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

article thumbnail The preeminent hip-hop dance company in the world, Rennie Harris Puremovement brings pure, contagious stage magic to Diana Wortham Theatre at Pack Place at 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, February 23-24, 2012.   Win Tickets to this Performance! Click here for details
+ Full Story

Arts & EntertainmentWin Tickets to the Rennie Harris Puremovement performance

Tuesday, 10 January 2012

article thumbnail For Local Middle School or High School Students Only Question: Please tell us in 200 words or less why Hip-Hop should be considered an art form. Your essay will be judged by the staff of the Urban News, and featured in the February edition, along with your picture. The...
+ Full Story

Our TownThe People’s Scholar, Dr. Boyce Watkins, to Keynote Prayer Breakfast

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

article thumbnail The Martin Luther King, Jr. Association of Asheville & Buncombe County announced that Dr. Boyce Watkins will give the keynote address at the 31st annual Prayer Breakfast honoring Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr. The breakfast will be the highlight of a series of events from Wednesday,...
+ Full Story

Our TownGetting to Diversity, Inclusion, and Cultural Competence in Multicultural Environments

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

article thumbnail by Don C. Locke Why “getting to?” Every organization is dynamic in terms of diversity and inclusion. Every organization is in the process of becoming diverse and inclusive. If we really believe in the importance of all people and groups, then every organization has room to...
+ Full Story

CommunitiesMLK Week Events & Celebrations

Wednesday, 11 January 2012

article thumbnail 31st Annual Prayer Breakfast - 8:30 a.m. The Prayer Breakfast begins at 8:30 a.m. at the Grand Ballroom of the historic Grove Park Inn & Resort at 290 Macon Avenue. Guest speaker Dr. Boyce Watkins will be joined by the Unity & Fellowship Choir and other distinguished guests....
+ Full Story

More News


Find us on Facebook
facebook_logo.jpg
Latest Forum Posts
 



RSS Feed