Bone Black: Memories of Girlhood

by bell hooks

Paperback, 1997

Status

Available

Call number

305.48896073

Collection

Publication

Holt Paperbacks (1997), Edition: 1ST, Paperback, 208 pages

Description

Stitching together girlhood memories with the finest threads of innocence, feminist intellectual bell hooks presents a powerfully intimate account of growing up in the South. A memoir of ideas and perceptions, Bone Black shows the unfolding of female creativity and one strong-spirited child's journey toward becoming a writer. She learns early on the roles women and men play in society, as well as the emotional vulnerability of children. She sheds new light on a society that beholds the joys of marriage for men and condemns anything more than silence for women. In this world, too, black is a woman's color--worn when earned--daughters and daddies are strangers under the same roof, and crying children are often given something to cry about. hooks finds good company in solitude, good company in books. She also discovers, in the motionless body of misunderstanding, that writing is her most vital breath.… (more)

User reviews

LibraryThing member FemmeFox
I loved this book! I am a huge bell hooks fan but this was the first of her books that I have read that was specifically about her life. I enjoyed the way the book was written and I identified with her struggle.

I highly recommend this book to anyone who is/was a girl or personally knows one. I
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think that this book gives some insight into how Black women are taught to define themselves and how sometimes that definition makes you an outsider within your own community.
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LibraryThing member froxgirl
I had never read anything by bell hooks, and this memoir of her early childhood is a fine launching place. She and I are the same age but hardly from the same circumstances. bell grew up as one of many children in a household with hard-working but abusive parents. As a result of her vivid
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imagination and give-no-fucks attitude, she was isolated and resented by her family and always yearned for her mother's approval but would not, could not, toe the line. The memoir is made up of brief chapters of recollection, flooded with exploding feelings and with a jaded awareness that she would be a singular sensation through her life. She befriends odd ducks like herself and considers that she is saved by books. The cover image, of a tiny girl in a dainty white pinafore dress, looking stubborn even at a young age, rends the heart and makes you yearn to have known her.

Quotes: "Only grownups think that the things children say come out of nowhere."

"I cannot stand all the secret places I have had to make inside myself."
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Original publication date

1996

Physical description

208 p.; 7.9 inches

ISBN

0805055126 / 9780805055122

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