Notes from a Black Woman's Diary: Selected Works of Kathleen Collins

Notes from a Black Woman's Diary: Selected Works of Kathleen Collins

Unabridged — 10 hours, 2 minutes

Notes from a Black Woman's Diary: Selected Works of Kathleen Collins

Notes from a Black Woman's Diary: Selected Works of Kathleen Collins

Unabridged — 10 hours, 2 minutes

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Overview

A RECOMMENDED BOOK OF 2019 FROM
Vanity Fair * Vogue * The Huffington Post

A stunning multi-cast audio collection of fiction, diary entries, screenplays, and scripts by the brilliant African-American artist and filmmaker, featuring the voices of Nina Collins, Mari, Bahni Turpin, Adenrele Ojo, January LaVoy, and Robin Miles.

Relatively unknown during her life, the artist, filmmaker, and writer Kathleen Collins emerged on the literary scene in 2016 with the posthumous publication of the short story collection Whatever Happened to Interracial Love? Said Zadie Smith, “To be this good and yet to be ignored is shameful, but her rediscovery is a great piece of luck for us.”

That rediscovery continues in Notes from a Black Woman's Diary, which spans genres to reveal the breadth and depth of the late author's talent. The compilation is anchored by more of Collins's short stories, which, striking and powerful in their brevity, reveal the ways in which relationships are both formed and come undone. Also collected here is the work Collins wrote for the screen and stage: the screenplay of her film Losing Ground, in which a professor discovers that the student film she's agreed to act in has uncomfortable parallels to her own life; and the script for The Brothers, a play about the potent effects of sexism and racism on a midcentury middle-class black family. And finally, it is in Collins's raw and prescient diaries that her nascent ideas about race, gender, marriage, and motherhood first play out on the page.

Kathleen Collins's writing brings to life vibrant characters whose quotidian concerns powerfully illuminate the particular joys, challenges, and heartbreaks rendered by the African-American experience. By turns empowering, exuberant, sexy, and poignant, Notes from a Black Woman's Diary is a brilliant compendium of an inimitable talent, and a rich portrait of a writer hard at work.


Editorial Reviews

MARCH 2019 - AudioFile

NOTES is a thought-provoking audiobook best consumed slowly, leaving time for reflection on editor Nina Collins’s reason for including each piece in the collection before taking in another installment. Collins, the author’s daughter, says her intent is to show her mother’s literary range. Each narrator provides a new experience for each literary offering, whether it’s prose, an incomplete screenplay, or a letter. The well-known narrators give gravitas to the disquieting truths about a black woman’s interior life. The most fascinating part of this work is the narrators’ care with the plays and screenplays. Each narrator follows the author’s stage directions, lending sorrow, surprise, haughtiness, and fear to the various characters. This is a work that will be listened to—even if only in parts—time and again. M.P.P. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

The New York Times Book Review - Camille Acker

Though the oeuvre hails from the '70s and '80s, nothing feels dated. Readers will discover Collins is as she characterized herself: "I live way ahead of myself in some ways, seeing things long before it is their time to come into being."

The New York Times - Parul Sehgal

For those under Collins's spell, our plaint will always be the same: more. Give us more—more letters, more diary entries, more careful curation of the work. What we really want for her is more life. And more art, because what we have—even when raw, unfinished…is dazzling…She is often compared to Grace Paley, lazily, I think…The two do overlap politically and share a certain generosity to their characters, but no one sounds like Collins…Her voice and vision are idiosyncratic and pitiless, combining mischief and crisp authority, formal experimentation and deep feeling…There is the sleekness of her sentences, and the burrs. There is cool skepticism but also hunger for rapture. There is humor a knife's edge from despair…In the stories collected in Whatever Happened to Interracial Love?, we encountered Collins the sharp, skillful satirist, especially where respectability politics were concerned. In Notes From a Black Woman's Diary, we see her imagination spill more freely—in quick character sketches and case studies in tension…

From the Publisher

A sweeping picture of a mega-talent who was overlooked during her lifetime.” — Vanity Fair

“Dazzling…. [Collins’] voice and vision are idiosyncratic and pitiless, combining mischief and crisp authority, formal experimentation and deep feeling…. There is cool skepticism but also hunger for rapture. There is humor a knife’s edge from despair…. [A] stylish, morally disheveling work.” — New York Times

“Collins proves her literary power across mediums — exploring the complexities of marriage, motherhood and identity — even 30 years after her death.” — Time

“[Kathleen Collins] and her work have been granted new and necessary examination.... ‘Notes from a Black Woman’s Diary’ further celebrates her fertile mind through her fiction (both finished and not), plays and personal reflections. Collins sought the complexity of interiors, of both our homes and ourselves.” — New York Times Book Review

“[Collins’] work not only addresses the everyday struggles of black men and women in the US, it also testifies to a vibrant inner life.” — Frieze

“[Notes from a Black Woman’s Diary] adds to the author’s evolving reputation.... Searing commentary on race and gender.... This compilation will add appreciation for a talented writer whose life was cut too short.” — Library Journal (starred review)

“Collins limns incisive portraits of artistic, intellectual black women stretched to their limits that glimmer against a background of racism, sexism, and just plain life. A timely reclamation of a remarkable voice.” — Booklist

Vanity Fair

A sweeping picture of a mega-talent who was overlooked during her lifetime.

New York Times

Dazzling…. [Collins’] voice and vision are idiosyncratic and pitiless, combining mischief and crisp authority, formal experimentation and deep feeling…. There is cool skepticism but also hunger for rapture. There is humor a knife’s edge from despair…. [A] stylish, morally disheveling work.

New York Times Book Review

[Kathleen Collins] and her work have been granted new and necessary examination.... ‘Notes from a Black Woman’s Diary’ further celebrates her fertile mind through her fiction (both finished and not), plays and personal reflections. Collins sought the complexity of interiors, of both our homes and ourselves.

Time

Collins proves her literary power across mediums — exploring the complexities of marriage, motherhood and identity — even 30 years after her death.

Booklist

Collins limns incisive portraits of artistic, intellectual black women stretched to their limits that glimmer against a background of racism, sexism, and just plain life. A timely reclamation of a remarkable voice.

Frieze

[Collins’] work not only addresses the everyday struggles of black men and women in the US, it also testifies to a vibrant inner life.

Booklist

Collins limns incisive portraits of artistic, intellectual black women stretched to their limits that glimmer against a background of racism, sexism, and just plain life. A timely reclamation of a remarkable voice.

Time

Collins proves her literary power across mediums — exploring the complexities of marriage, motherhood and identity — even 30 years after her death.

MARCH 2019 - AudioFile

NOTES is a thought-provoking audiobook best consumed slowly, leaving time for reflection on editor Nina Collins’s reason for including each piece in the collection before taking in another installment. Collins, the author’s daughter, says her intent is to show her mother’s literary range. Each narrator provides a new experience for each literary offering, whether it’s prose, an incomplete screenplay, or a letter. The well-known narrators give gravitas to the disquieting truths about a black woman’s interior life. The most fascinating part of this work is the narrators’ care with the plays and screenplays. Each narrator follows the author’s stage directions, lending sorrow, surprise, haughtiness, and fear to the various characters. This is a work that will be listened to—even if only in parts—time and again. M.P.P. © AudioFile 2019, Portland, Maine

Kirkus Reviews

★ 2018-12-11

A multigenre collection of Collins' (Whatever Happened to Interracial Love?, 2016) previously unpublished writing—fiction, letters, diary entries, plays, and screenplays—collected here and edited by her daughter, 30 years after the author's death.

"The greatest marvel of Collins's writing is that she is a magician in her use of interiority," writes Danielle Evans (Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self, 2010) in the collection's introduction. "She can just slip underneath a moment of tension barely noticed by those in the world of the story and give us a character's entire interior life, but she is also a master of the moments when…all pretense drops away and the unsayable is given words and said out loud." It is, as the works here quickly demonstrate, a mastery that transcends form. The book opens with a trio of short stories, each of them centered around a woman as she is observed, followed by an excerpt from an unfinished novel, Lollie: A Suburban Tale, in which a bohemian husband and wife fight for narrative control of their marriage. It's a fight that ends prematurely; the immediate tragedy is the excerpt cuts off. The fragments from Collins' actual life—first the diary entries and then the letters—are as arrestingly clear as the fiction, small and expansive at once. Dated Sept. 9: "They're selling an old medieval house on Mason's Road, where the rooms go on endlessly, like a labyrinth. We went there on Saturday and bought five red chairs for the kitchen." And reflecting on life on an April 11: "Instead of dealing with race I went in search of love…and what I found was a very hungry colored lady." The bulk of the work here, though, are the scripts, one for her 1982 feature film, Losing Ground—a "comedy drama" about a philosophy professor who finds herself starring in a student film that hews unsettlingly close to her real life—and one for the stage play The Brothers, the story of a striving middle-class black family, told by its grieving women.

Reading Collins work the same themes over again and again across mediums is a rare pleasure—as close as most of us will ever come to her spectacular mind.

Product Details

BN ID: 2940173782557
Publisher: HarperCollins
Publication date: 02/05/2019
Edition description: Unabridged
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