eBook

$9.95 

Available on Compatible NOOK devices, the free NOOK App and in My Digital Library.
WANT A NOOK?  Explore Now

Related collections and offers

LEND ME® See Details

Overview

Dedicated to all girls and women, regardless of ethnic origin, who have been in anyway abused or have lost their spirit for whatever reason.

Black girls’ hearts beat with the burden of a dark and heavy stone of doubt and despair that lies within us which creates chaos and wreak havoc within our spiritual souls. It causes us to fall short of our own emotional expectations. We are taught that the heart is a vessel for love and is a place where love radiates. But, in some instances that light can grow dim and we sometimes can get lost in the despair and darkness which cast a shadow over our spirit.

The hearts is our guiding light. This same heart beats with optimism and courage that allows us to face and fight our demons, create the determination to fight our way back to the light and have love for ourselves. It is only then that
we feel the peacefulness of the soft breezes which blows from the four corners of our hearts which as God’s children we deserve.

Black Girls’ Hearts in a Poem is a paradox of that light and dark which black girls so often experience. We allow ourselves to fall into the deepest depth of defeatism. The darkness can make us neglect and damage our children. Such as illustrated in the poems “A Mother’s Loss” and “Crying Out.” We can let this darkness allow others to abuse our temples and our minds. This darkness can cause us to hurt others because we ourselves hurt inside. This is representative in the poem “Another Individual’s Death Song.”

But when we let the light shine through and we let God take our hand we will become beacons of love for all but especially for ourselves. We will take our children into our bosom and protect them from all who wish to do them harm, as seen in the poem “Determined.” In the poem “Little Black Girl” we see a young woman having the courage to take her life into her own hands and make things better for herself without relying on anyone but God and her own spirituality.

For our spirituality and knowledge of ourselves will evaporate the darkness and allow us to see inside our hearts and see all the love that is waiting to set us free from that dark and heavy stone of doubt and despair.

Let this be the path that leads us to be better black girls and ultimately better human beings.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940012816221
Publisher: Kani Publishing, Inc.
Publication date: 06/29/2011
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 98
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Shanta I. Duck was born in New York City and moved to Lillington, N.C. with her parents at the age of 4. Shanta attended Overhill High School in North Carolina where she graduated before going on to Central Carolina Community College from which she
would also graduate.

Since elementary school Shanta has been fascinated with writing poetry and short stories. She especially loves to write children’s stories and is currently working
on a children’s book about an adventurous fairy as well as an animated children’s movie.
Her love for writing has inspired her to publish this collection of poems.

Deanna Lester Clark was born in Newark, New Jersey on January 30, 1991.She moved to North Carolina where she attended and graduated from Middle Creek High School in 2009. She loves to read, write, and spend time with her family and to communicate her thoughts through her poetry.

Tira Adams born 1982 in Brooklyn, New York is an aspiring actress, playwright, and producer. She studied Advertising and Marketing at Fashion Institute of Technology in New York.

She may have inherited her wit and writing skills from her father, the platinum record producer, Patrick Adams, recipient of three ASCAP Songwriter of the Year
Awards.

She is a prolific reader who enjoys a wide range of literature from the great classics to contemporary works like the Harry Potter series.

Her curiosity about the Universe drives her to keep an open mind about possibilities. As Hamlet said, “There are more things in heaven and earth, Horatio, than are dreamt of in your philosophy…
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews