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Black Girl, Call Home

Best Seller
Black Girl, Call Home by Jasmine Mans
Paperback $15.00
Mar 09, 2021 | ISBN 9780593197141

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  • Mar 09, 2021 | ISBN 9780593197141

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Product Details

Praise

“Lyrical, vivid.”
Time 

“You are carrying in your hands a Black woman’s heart.”
Jericho Brown, author of Pulitzer Prize winner The Tradition

“Mans takes up the tools of Brooks and Sanchez into her good hands and chisels us an urgent and grand work, proving why she’s the favorite poet of all the girls in the back of the bus.”
Danez Smith, author of National Book Award finalist for poetry Don’t Call Us Dead
 
“This book is a haven for all the Black daughters out there, hoping to make sense of the power and powerlessness in their bodies, the connection to others’ bodies, and the moments of everyday life that comprise so much of our identities.”
Morgan Jerkins, New York Times bestselling author of This Will Be My Undoing
 
“These poems both explode and glimmer on the page.”
Clint Smith, author of NAACP Image Award finalist Counting Descent
 
“The collection is so steeped with tenderness, it feels intimate and wholly relatable.”
Maisy Card, author of These Ghosts Are Family 

“In a deft and breathtaking portrayal of identity, race, sexuality, family, and feminism, spoken-word poet Jasmine Mans explores the painful, joyous path to adulthood as a young, queer Black woman in America.”
Marie Claire

“Mans is the kind of poignant writer who gives voice to the voiceless and reminds us about the need to care for others.”
— Shondaland


“Gorgeously precise…a timely and powerful book.”
Publishers Weekly

“If your grandmother has ever surprised you by bopping along to trap music at a cookout you will love Jasmine Mans’ work.”
Essence

“Delving into heartbreak, community, family, race, queer identity, sexual violence, feminism, and celebrity, Mans’ poems are startling and unforgettable.” 
—Booklist


“Jasmine Mans pulls at all the threads of who she is as a Black queer woman from Newark, unravels herself, then puts herself back together via clear, precise language that brooks no argument…Black Girl, Call Home moves from vignette to cultural criticism to ballad to eulogy to memoir with grace.”
—Vulture

“Mans’ story feels universal in so many ways.”
Real Simple

“Writing in surefooted verse, Mans refuses to allow our stories to be misunderstood.”
Dr. Alysia Harris, Pushcart nominated author of How Much We Must Have Looked Like Stars to Stars

“This might be your introduction to Jasmine but it won’t be the last time you read her.”
—Medium

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