Wanda Coleman

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Softcover, 320 pages
ISBN 1-57423-200-2
$18.95

The Riot Inside Me: More Trials and Tremors
essays by Wanda Coleman

Click here for an online preview of The Riot Inside Me

Coleman is best known for her “warrior voice.” [But her] voice too can weep elegiac, summoning memories of childhood’s neighborhoods – her South L.A.’s wild-frond palms, the smog-smear of pre-ecology consciousness. Her voice hits notes as desperate as Billie Holiday’s tours of sorrow’s more desolate stretches. But it can also land a wily punch line as solid as that of a stand-up comic.
– Los Angeles Times

In this, her second collection of nonfiction prose,
Wanda Coleman continues the project she began in Native in a Strange Land (1996), a project she once described as “a tour through the restless emotional topography of Los Angeles as glimpsed through scattered fragments of my living memory.” It is a sometimes antic tour, with unforgettable commentary – Coleman’s “intermittent outcries, moans, shouts, and jubilations along the route.”

The Riot Inside Me once again finds the author at the bloody crossroads where art & politics, the personal & the political, and L.A. & the larger world meet and trade blows before resuming their separate paths. The 26 pieces gathered here – a “hopscotch” of essays, memoirs, interviews, and reports – are divided into four sections. One collects autobiographical pieces, including a haunting memoir of her first husband, a moth drawn to the flames of the more extreme forms of ’60s radicalism. Another section is reserved for polemics, mainly issues of Black & White; a third collects Coleman’s now famous “bad” review of Maya Angelou’s Song Flung Up to Heaven – “the most controversial piece I’ve yet written” – and a caustically funny report on its fallout. The book concludes with a group of essays on race, class, and poetry, pieces that one critic called “sardonic when it comes to politics and groups [but] tender and hopeful when it comes to individuals.”

“Satire and journalism are alive and well in L.A.,” says Publishers Weekly, “at least when Coleman is doing the biting and the reporting.” So is art, and so, of course, is truth.

 

 


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