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A01=Yalie Saweda Kamara
African American diaspora
African poetry
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Angie Stone
Author_Yalie Saweda Kamara
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bicultural
Black American poetry
Black scholarship
blackness
California
Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=DCF
Christianity
codeswitching
community
compassion
COP=United States
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diasporic poetry
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eq_biography-true-stories
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family
female experience
goodbyes
grief
healing
identity
immigrant
intersectionality
Language_English
loss
lumpia
molombo fruit
motherhood
Nia Wilson
Nina Simone
Oakland
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poetry of witness
Price_€10 to €20
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ritual
separateness
Sierra Leone
sobriety
softlaunch
solidarity
spiritual poetry
spirituality
tradition
Western Africa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781639550319
  • Dimensions: 203 x 254mm
  • Publication Date: 22 Feb 2024
  • Publisher: Milkweed Editions
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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Selected by Amaud Jamaul Johnson for the 2023 Jake Adam York Prize, Yalie Saweda Kamara’s Besaydoo is an elegantly wrought love song to home—as place, as people, as body, and as language.

A griot is a historian, a living repository of communal legacies with “a story pulsing in every blood cell.” In Besaydoo, Kamara serves as griot for the Freeborn in Oakland, the Sierra Leonean in California, the girl straddling womanhood, the woman re-discovering herself. “I am made from the obsession of detail,” she writes, setting scenes from her own multifaceted legacy in sharp relief: the memory of her mother’s singing, savory stacks of lumpia, a church where “everyone is broken, but trying.” A multitudinous witness.

 Kamara psalms from the nexus of many languages—Krio, English, French, poetry’s many dialects—to highlight mechanisms not just for survival, but for abundance. “I make myth for peace,” she writes, as well as for loss, for delight, for kinship, and most of all for a country where Black means “steadfast and opulent,” and “dangerous and infinite.” She writes for a new America, where praise is plentiful and Black lives flourish.

But in Besaydoo, there is no partition between the living and the dead. There is no past nor present. There is, instead, a joyful simultaneity—a liberating togetherness sustained by song.

The Besaydoo audiobook read by Yalie Saweda Kamara is available everywhere you listen to audiobooks.

Yalie Saweda Kamara is a Sierra Leonean American writer, educator, and researcher from Oakland, California. Selected as the 2022–2023 Cincinnati and Mercantile Library Poet Laureate (2-year term) and a 2023 Academy of American Poets Laureate Fellow, she is the editor of the anthology What You Need to Know About Me: Young Writers on Their Experience of Immigration and the author of the chapbooks A Brief Biography of My Name and When the Living Sing. Kamara earned a PhD in Creative Writing and English Literature from the University of Cincinnati. She is an assistant professor of English at Xavier University and resides in Cincinnati.

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