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Wanda Coleman's powerful new novel chronicles the friendship between two women -- one from the black ghetto of Los Angeles, one from its white middle-class suburbs. Both are aspiring writers, both scramble to pay their bills by pickup jobs like waitressing and editing pulp magazines. For two decades they share each other's troubles and triumphs in and out of work and love. Coleman focuses primarily on the white protagonist's point of view; as the story unfolds and the character's roots are unearthed, however, we learn that there's no such thing as "pure" white -- only a mix of bloods concealed…mehr

Produktbeschreibung
Wanda Coleman's powerful new novel chronicles the friendship between two women -- one from the black ghetto of Los Angeles, one from its white middle-class suburbs. Both are aspiring writers, both scramble to pay their bills by pickup jobs like waitressing and editing pulp magazines. For two decades they share each other's troubles and triumphs in and out of work and love. Coleman focuses primarily on the white protagonist's point of view; as the story unfolds and the character's roots are unearthed, however, we learn that there's no such thing as "pure" white -- only a mix of bloods concealed over time. As With Coleman's earlier books, Mambo Hips is alive with her patented emotional energy and lyric heat. How do good girls go wrong? Answer: It's not about the lips, it's all about the hips. It sounded simple, even childish at first. But the subtext proved metaphor for the sexual politics of a whole generation. Hips. Loose hot heavy and swaying. The kind some crave to be smothered under. Blame it on those smoky-throated torchy red-hot mamas blistering the radio waves of the day, "Hey, Paisano -- learn how to Mambo! If you gonna be a square you ain'ttagonna go nowhere, " or "Com' onna my house, ta my house com' on..." or that gold-throated Johnny Ace throwing croon, "Flamingo, when the sun meets the sea, won't you fly to my lover...." Blame the shame not on Mame, but on the Fabulous Fifties. They were born there, if not then, and the sugar-sweet dreams of who they wer to become were seeded there.... Blame it on Chet Baker and Charles Mingus. Blame it on Bobby Darin and James Brown. Most of all, blame it on those hot neon California nights when the lonely hear the palms whisper in their blood....
Autorenporträt
Wanda Coleman¿poet, storyteller and journalist¿was born and raised in South Central Los Angeles. Coleman was awarded the prestigious 1999 Lenore Marshall Poetry Prize for Bathwater Wine from the American Academy of Poets, becoming the first African-American woman to ever win the prize, and was a bronze-medal finalist for the 2001 National Book Award for Poetry for Mercurochrome. In 2020, poet Terrance Hayes edited and introduced a selection of her work, Wicked Enchantment: Selected Poems, the first new collection of her work since her death in 2013.