Song of My Soul

Poems by An American Man of Color to Commemorate the 2019 Harlem Renaissance Centennial

by Paul Evans


Formats

Hardcover
$38.95
Softcover
$28.95
E-Book
$6.99
Hardcover
$38.95

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 6/10/2008

Format : Hardcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 484
ISBN : 9780595711635
Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 484
ISBN : 9780595470259
Format : E-Book
Dimensions : N/A
Page Count : 484
ISBN : 9780595913091

About the Book

Paul Evans, a former Baltimore newspaperman, uses the power of poetry to present a unique look at the decency and respectability of black Americans' lives before, during, and after the Civil Rights Movement in tribute to the Harlem Renaissance. However, Mr. Evans does not stop there. Uniquely, writing as a black man, he also offers poems that express his desire to see a nation that is inclusive and fair to all Americans, not overlooking the working-class white people who have been left out of Martin Luther King's dream.

The Harlem Renaissance has taken its rightful place alongside the many literary movements and eras that have comprised American Literature. Through expressive verse, Mr. Evans reflects on the simplicity of an earlier time in a black man's life such as tending a coal furnace, talking to the ice cream man, or in "A Colored Boy at the Ocean" when he writes, Ocean, ocean carry me away/I'm a little colored boy here at play/I care not where your waves might take me to go/As long as getting there is mighty awfully slow. He honors the spirited artists, musicians, and writers who created magic during a dazzling period in American culture.

As the centennial of the Harlem Renaissance approaches in 2019, Mr. Evans encourages a revisiting to this special time, resulting in a new appreciation of the importance of the work of the renaissance's writers and poets, in particular, whose work urged America to be what it says it is.


About the Author

Paul Evans is a former reporter and managing editor at the Baltimore Afro-American and a former columnist at The Sun. He has taught composition, American literature, and black American literature college-level classes. A graduate of Morgan State and Johns Hopkins universities, Mr. Evans resides in Baltimore where he is working on a novel, a play, and a collection of short stories.