About this item
Highlights
- An anthology celebrating twenty-five years of the Carolina African American Writers' Collective edited by founder Lenard D. Moore.
- About the Author: Lenard D. Moore is an internationally acclaimed poet and anthologist.
- 224 Pages
- Literary Collections, American
Description
About the Book
The Carolina African American Writers' Collective celebrates its twenty-fifth anniversary with an anthology of works by members of the Collective, edited by its founder, Lenard D. Moore. North Carolina Poet Laureate Jaki Shelton Green introduces the anthology.Book Synopsis
An anthology celebrating twenty-five years of the Carolina African American Writers' Collective edited by founder Lenard D. Moore.Review Quotes
"All The Songs We Sing is a complex, nuanced ballad, an important ensemble of voices worth listening to and spending careful time with. The artists of the Carolina African American Writers' Collective have not only brought the noise, they've brought the music."-Southern Review of Books
"All the Songs We Sing dazzles in scope and variety, highlighting the expansive talents of African American storytellers and poets from the Carolinas...This anthology contains a triumphant choir of stories, essays, and poems that sing from their guts...An expansive and poignant harmony of Black poets and writers that will inspire and uplift any reader wanting to listen."-Lindsay Lake, Raleigh Review
About the Author
Lenard D. Moore is an internationally acclaimed poet and anthologist. His literary works have been published in more than fifteen countries and translated into more than a dozen languages. He is a U.S. Army Veteran. Moore is the author of The Geography of Jazz, A Temple Looming, Desert Storm: A Brief History, Forever Home, and The Open Eye, among others. He is the editor for One Window's Light: A collection of Haiku. He is the founder and executive director of the Carolina African American Writers' Collective and the Executive Chairman of the North Carolina Haiku Society. He was the first African American president of the Haiku Society of America. His awards include the North Carolina Award for Literature and the Haiku Museum of Tokyo Award. He teaches African American literature and creative writing at the University of Mount Olive, where he is the poet-in-residence.