Book Review: The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni, 1968-1998

Book Cover Images image of The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni, 1968-1998

by Nikki Giovanni

    Publication Date: Nov 25, 2003
    List Price: $24.95
    Format: Hardcover, 452 pages
    Classification: Poetry
    ISBN13: 9780060541330
    Imprint: William Morrow
    Publisher: HarperCollins
    Parent Company: News Corp

    Read a Description of The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni, 1968-1998


    Book Reviewed by Rondall Brasher


    The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni has been grafted to my hands for the last 3 weeks. This anthology is the chronological atlas of her published work from 1968 - 1998. But this goes beyond the simplicity of a gathered collection of publications. Each work is tagged with a biographical timeline; introductions; new after-words from Giovanni; along with title and first line indexes, and illuminating notes about the poems. The effort to put together a first rate book is evident from page one. The liner notes refer to this book as the testimony of Giovanni life’s work. I concur with this assessment and commend the results.

    For those of you who are Nikki Giovanni fans, this book is more than just complementary. It provides depth through personal insights that tend to edify her work. Her books of poems: Black Feeling Black Talk (1968), Black Judgment (1968), Re: Creation (1970), My House (1972), The Women and the Men (1975), Cotton Candy on a Rainy Day (1978), and Those Who Ride Night Winds (1983) are here in completion. She has also included a section called Occasional Poems which are primarily contemporary odes dedicated to significant persons/people whom have moved her to pay homage to them in words.

    This collection could be a chronological study of the transition of Giovanni’s poetry. Her iconic debut was the self-published revolutionary scripture Black Feeling Black Talk. It is a contemporary collection that has established itself as an indisputable centerpiece of modern poetry. This book is a resounding voice for the 1960’s Black empowerment and pain. It is an ardent torch for socio-political change. Giovanni’s work did not just comment on society’s ills, she verbally demonstrated against it.

    So let us work
    For our of presence
    When Stokely is in
    The Black House
    And all will be right with
    Our World

    From A Historical Footnote to Consider
    Only When all Else Fails

    This acridity of her writing changed at the break of the 70’s. This is probably not so coincidental with the birth of her son. Giovanni evolved from writing what was outside her window, to what was in her soul. Her book aptly titled My House initiates a trek of introspection that has continued to cultivate itself over time. Her poetry grows to entwine her with the world that she has become a vital part. By the time her most recent works are written the evolution is evident and pronounce. Giovanni has taught, but more importantly she has learned. She fills art not only with her imagination, but her readers also. It could be that she hopes to initiate change one mind at a time.

    The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni is not flawless in its attempt to give readers a definitive presentation of this artist. There have been other collections from her as recent as The Selected Poems of Nikki Giovanni: 1968-1995, which was published in 1996. There was also The Nikki Giovanni Poetry Collection audio disk that she released back in December 2002. Multiple volumes of poetry collections always turn me off. This book however, is by far the most complete chronological presentation of her work. The annotation of her work is also very nice. I would prefer not to see a continued duplication of the same content, even if it is the venerated Nikki Giovanni.
     

    Read William Morrow’s description of The Collected Poetry of Nikki Giovanni, 1968-1998.

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