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Nursery Rhymes in Black is a poetic recollection of race, roots, culture, and identity. Paying homage to the memory and work of elders and ancestors, Latorial Faison remembers her own matriarch, mother, grandmother-the rich memories of having grown up in rural, historic Southampton County, Virginia. These poignant poems mark significant moments and tell the lives of the people along the author's journey through the post-segregation Jim Crow South.
The collection highlights family, overcoming adversity, and endurance from the Black female perspective and celebrates the individuals and experiences that shape life and have catapulted the author into a unique existence. Narrative poems give voice to the Black Southern girlhood experience of being saved, nurtured, inspired, and even challenged by plight and circumstance. Strengthened by her experiences, Faison provides power, courage, and wisdom that resonate deeply. These poems walk in naked truth on a lyrical, musical tightrope as each brings wisdom and honesty in the intimacy of arranged words. Faison takes readers along the development of her own identity, considering stories of unsung heroes, the hands that feed us, the ancestors and traditions that form us, and the challenging ways that race, history, education, and culture intersect. With this spiritually moving collection, Faison joins all poets and writers who have come to prolifically amplify Black voices, to tell Black stories, to continue the Black literary tradition we have been gifted.
In these poems, Faison calls readers into poetic fellowship with the memories, the legacies, the truths of Black women in the South. There is reverence, history, and glory on these pages celebrating the hands, hearts, work, trouble, and ways of Black women and all the ways they teach, become, fascinate, struggle, survive, and exist in the world.
Nursery Rhymes in Black lulls us-but not to sleep-rather, to wake up, to speak out, to take a stand, to advocate as we pause to remember, understand, and celebrate.
About the author
Latorial Faison is an American poet, author, veteran military spouse, mother, and assistant professor of English and creative writing. Her writing continues the African American literary tradition and explores the intersections of the Black experience in terms of race, culture, and identity. Faison's poetry and creative nonfiction have been published extensively in literary outlets, such as
Callaloo,
Obsidian: Literature & Art in the African Diaspora,
Aunt Chloe,
Stonecoast Review,
Artemis Journal,
Prairie Schooner,
West Trestle Review,
The Southern Poetry Anthology,
Southern Women's Review,
About Place Journal,
Deep South Magazine, and others. She is the author of
The Missed Education of the Negro: An Examination of the Black Segregated Experience in Southampton County, Virginia 1950-1970,
Mother to Son,
I Am Woman,
Love Poems, and the trilogy collection
28 Days of Poetry Celebrating Black History. A Tom Howard Poetry Prize recipient and Pushcart nominee, Faison has also been awarded fellowships from Furious Flower Poetry Center, Virginia Humanities, Association of Writers & Writing Programs, and the Hudson Valley Writers Center. She currently serves on the faculty of Virginia State University.