This section contains 2,708 words (approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page) |
SOURCE: An interview in Black Women Writers at Work, edited by Claudia Tate, Continuum, 1983, pp. 205-13.
Lillie P. Howard on Williams's Work as a Poet:
Poet and critic, Sherley Anne Williams uses her poignantly lyrical voice to speak for and to the reader, often singing a blues so real that when one reads her poems, one unconsciously supplies the music and begins a foot-stomping, down-home rhythm of one's own. That Williams can render the cadence of the blues so accurately attests to her skill; that she uses the blues to reach back and bring the past to the present attests to her role as a tradition bearer and puts her firmly in that long line of artists that stretches all the way back to the beginnings of black folk culture.
Lillie P. Howard, in her "Sherley Anne Williams," in Dictionary of Literary Biography, Vol. 41: Afro-American Poets since 1955, Gale...
This section contains 2,708 words (approx. 10 pages at 300 words per page) |