Gwendolyn Brooks
Gwendolyn Brooks (1917 - 2000) was a award-winning
African American woman poet. Born in
Topeka, Kansas, she grew up in and remained in
Chicago, Illinois. Although she also wrote a novel, an autobiography and some other
prose works, she was noted primarily as a
poet. Her 1949 book of poetry,
Annie Allen, received a
Pulitzer Prize, the first won by an African American. In 1968 she was made
Poet Laureate of
Illinois. Other awards she received included the Frost Medal, the Shelley Memorial Award, and an American Academy of Arts and Letters award.
Her poetry is rooted in the poor and mostly African-American South Side of Chicago. She initially published her poetry as a columnist for the Chicago Defender, an African American newspaper. Although her poems range in style from traditional ballads and sonnets to using blues rhythms in free verse, her characters are often drawn from the poor inner city. Her bluesy poem "We Real Cool" is often found in school textbooks. She is seen as a leader of the Black Arts movement.
After her first book of poetry was published in 1945, she received a Guggenheim Fellowship. After John F. Kennedy invited her to a Library of Congress poetry festival in 1962, she began a college teaching career which saw her teach at Columbia College (Chicago), Northeastern Illinois University, Elmhurst College, Columbia University, Clay College of New York, and the University of Wisconsin. She was the 1985 Library of Congress' Consultant in Poetry, a one year position whose title changed the next year to Poet Laureate Consultant in Poetry. In 1994, she was chosen as the National Endowment for the Humanities's Jefferson Lecturer, one of the highest honors for American literature.
Works
Poetry except as noted.
- A Street in Bronzeville (1945)
- Annie Allen (1949)
- Maud Martha (1953) (Fiction)
- Bronzeville Boys and Girls (1956)
- The Bean Eaters (1960)
- Selected Poems (1963)
- We Real Cool (1966)
- The Wall (1967)
- In the Mecca (1968)
- Family Pictures (1970)
- Riot (1970)
- Black Steel: Joe Frazier and Muhammad Ali (1971)
- The World of Gwendolyn Brooks (1971)
- Aloneness (1971)
- Report from Part One: An Autobiography (1972) (Prose)
- A Capsule Course in Black Poetry Writing (1975) (Prose)
- Aurora (1972)
- Beckonings (1975)
- Black Love (1981)
- To Disembark (1981)
- Primer for Blacks (1981) (Prose)
- Young Poet's Primer (1981) (Prose)
- Very Young Poets (1983) (Prose)
- The Near-Johannesburg Boy and Other Poems (1986)
- Blacks (1987)
- Winnie (1988)
- Children Coming Home (1991)
External Links