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The Heart of a Woman
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The Heart of a Woman
Author: Maya Angelou

Book Information
Publisher: Random House
Book Type: Hardcover
Rating:

ISBN-13: 9780375500725 - ISBN-10: 0375500723
Pages: 288


Other Versions of this Book: Audio CD (Abridged), Paperback, Paperback, Audio Cassette, Hardcover

Book Description:
In The Heart of a Woman Maya Angelou leaves California with her son, Guy, to go to New York. There she enters the society and world of black artists and writers. Not since her childhood has she lived in an almost black environment, and she is surprised at the obsession her new friends have with the white world around them. She stays for a while with John and Grace Killens and begins to read her writing at the Harlem Writers Guild. She continues to sing, most notably at the Apollo Theatre in Harlem, but more and more she begins to take part in the struggle of black Americans for their rightful place in the world. She helps organize a benefit cabaret for the Southern Christian Leadership Conference, and then is appointed Martin Luther Kings Northern Coordinator.

Shortly after that, through her friend Abbey Lincoln, she takes one of the lead parts in Genet's The Blacks (it was a remarkable cast, including Godfrey Cambridge, Roscoe Lee Brown, James Earl Jones, Cicely Tyson, Raymond St. Jacques, and Lou Gossett), and even writes music for the production.

In the meantime her personal life has taken a tempestuous turn. She has left the New York bail bondsman she was intending to marry and has fallen in love with a South African freedom fighter named Vusumzi Make, who sweeps her off her feet and eventually takes her to London and then to Cairo, where, as her marriage begins to break up, she becomes the first female editor of the English-language magazine.

The Heart of a Woman is filled with unforgettable vignettes of famous people, from Billie Holiday to Malcolm X, but perhaps most important is the story of Maya Angelou's relationship with her son. Because this book chronicles, finally, the joys and the burdens of a black mother in America and how the son she had cherished so intensely and worked for so devotedly finally grows to be a man.

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Please Rate these Book Reviews

Angie V. (abirdv) - Collierville, TN wrote on 7/24/2009...


I don't normally like biographies/autobiographies. But I'm changing my tune.

She writes well. Very real. Very true. It is her emotions and her life out there. Takes courage to write something like this.

This book makes me think. Makes me think about racial relations and how deep it runs.

Time that this book covers....She works part of the time with Martin Luther King, Jr (in a ny chapter). Meets with Malcolm X. Works to further the civil rights movement and spends part of the time in Africa.

She talks about her life/son/marriage in with the history.

Marci and Duane S. (flame60) wrote on 2/28/2007...


I didn't like this book. It seemed to be rather dry. The old adage of "too much information!" applies here. It's good for a history of her life ,however.

Liz M. (LizzieMac) wrote on 7/30/2006...


A fifth autobiographical volume from Ms. Angelou about her career and the maturing of her son.

Eileen G. (dulcimerlady) wrote on 5/26/2006...


Anything that Maya Angelou writes is poignant and well written - this personal narrative tells about her relationships with both famous people and those who are closest to her heart - her son, especially.


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