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Tayari Jones

Tayari Jones was born in Atlanta, GA in 1970. She lived there for most of her life. With the exception of the year she lived in Nigeria, she lived there until she finished Spelman College in 1991. After Spelman, she went to the University of Iowa to pursue a Ph.D. in English.

After earning a Masters, she decided that she wanted to do something more hands-on, she moved to Prairie View, TX where she taught Developmental Reading. As a teacher, Tayari spent three years encouraging her students to follow their dreams. She realized that it was time to start taking her own advice.

In 1996 she decided to go back to graduate school: this time, to study creative writing. A chance meeting with Jewell Parker Rhodes afforded Tayari the opportunity to work toward a Master of Fine Arts in fiction writing. With only a promise from Ms. Parker Rhodes, she drove two thousand miles to accept a scholarship to Arizona State University.

Leaving Atlanta, a novel based on her experiences living in Atlanta during the Atlanta Child Murders, was her Masters thesis

 

Silver SparrowSilver Sparrow
Click to order via Amazon

Hardcover: 352 pages
Publisher: Algonquin Books (May 31, 2011)
Language: English
ISBN-10: 1565129903
ISBN-13: 978-1565129900

A 2012 Hurston/Wright Legacy Award Nominated Book

Nominated for a 2011 NAACP Image Award for Outstanding Literary Work - Fiction

With the opening line of Silver Sparrow, 'My father, James Witherspoon, is a bigamist,' author Tayari Jones unveils a breathtaking story about a man's deception, a family's complicity, and two teenage girls caught in the middle.

Set in a middle-class neighborhood in Atlanta in the 1980s, the novel revolves around James Witherspoon's two families'the public one and the secret one. When the daughters from each family meet and form a friendship, only one of them knows they are sisters. It is a relationship destined to explode when secrets are revealed and illusions shattered. As Jones explores the backstories of her rich yet flawed characters'the father, the two mothers, the grandmother, and the uncle'she also reveals the joy, as well as the destruction, they brought to one another's lives.

At the heart of it all are the two lives at stake, and like the best writers'think Toni Morrison with The Bluest Eye'Jones portrays the fragility of these young girls with raw authenticity as they seek love, demand attention, and try to imagine themselves as women, just not as their mothers.

 

The Untelling
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ISBN: 0446532460
Format: Hardcover, 336pp
Pub. Date: April 2005
Publisher: Warner Books, Incorporated


Aria is no stranger to tragedy. Fifteen years ago, a family outing took the lives of her father and baby sister, leaving remaining members of this fractured family struggling to live with their own guilt'real and imagined. At 25, Aria believes she can reinvent herself through her planned marriage, with all its promise of a family of her own. But the reality of infertility changes Aria's life as swiftly and irrevocably as the urban landscape around her. With prose that is both eloquent and unflinching, Jones charts the emotional journey of her characters as they explore the painful territory of truth and the healing landscape of forgiveness.

 

Leaving Atlanta
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ISBN: 0446528307
Format: Hardcover, 286pp
Pub. Date: July 2002
Publisher: Warner Books, Incorporated

Read an AALBC.com review by Thumper

It's summer in Atlanta and black children are disappearing. By the time the heinous killing spree is over, 29 will be dead. This haunting menace provides the backdrop to the exquisitely evocative stories of three children fighting the everyday battles of adolescence: Tasha, who is coping with her parents' separation and the sweet pain of a first crush on a tender boy; Rodney, who struggles to make friends and wants only to please his abusive father; and Octavia, who faces down the popular crowd at school and must straddle the line between protected and protective daughter. Ultimately, these individual stories reveal the loss of innocence that accompanies the passage from childhood to adulthood.

 

Related Links

Tayari Jones Homepage
http://www.tayarijones.com

The un-tortured writer
by Richard Nilsen, The Arizona Republic (Jul. 7, 2003)
http://www.azcentral.com/ent/arts/articles/0707tayari07.html