Monday, June 28, 2010
Authors On The Rise Interviews Poet Aberjhani
Authors On The Rise is happy to bring you an interview from Author-Poet Aberjhani. Enjoy!
AOTR: Please tell us about yourself and the books you have written.
Aberjhani: I’m a fiction writer, historian, journalist, creative nonfiction writer, and poet, so my eight published books tend to reflect these different genres. I was born and raised in Savannah, Georgia, during the last century, birthday July 8, but have lived many places in the United States and outside the continental U.S.
AOTR: Which of your books is your favorite? Why?
Aberjhani: For me to choose a favorite book written by me is about as difficult, or even impossible, as for a parent to choose a favorite offspring. They’ve all provided reasons for celebration and gratitude, but my youngest, as in newest, is “The River of Winged Dreams” and I am amazed by this book for many reasons. It developed out of a need to move beyond a very painful stage in my life and I at first was unsure about sharing it with the public, but then I realized it was gifted to me at least as much for readers around the world as for myself. Much of the material came to me like visitations from angels, and just that aspect of the book’s creation is extraordinary in itself. I do talk about that in the book and on various websites. And my intuition about the work being for others as well was apparently correct because various artists have started to use excerpts to accompany their visual creations.
Where my other titles are concerned, I am deeply honored that according to figures posted on the WorldCat Library network, “Encyclopedia of the Harlem Renaissance” (Facts on File) which I wrote with Sandra L. West, is in more libraries throughout the global village than any other encyclopedia on the Harlem Renaissance. That means it will stand as a lasting contribution and we can feel good about helping students all over the world with their homework [big smile here:] on that particular subject. On the other hand, “ELEMENTAL, The Power of Illuminated Love” is a very different and ambitious kind of book that showcases the award-winning art of Luther E. Vann with essays and poetry by me. That book took 17 years to complete and publish and is a modern rarity of its kind because Vann and I are both living creative artists with bona fide ties to the Harlem Renaissance and publishers rarely invest in books of this quality. “The Wisdom of W.E.B. Du Bois” allows me to share a by-line with the great Du Bois so that kind of speaks for itself. “Christmas When Music Almost Killed the World” was my first novel, so I have to respect that fact, and “I Made MY Boy Out of Poetry” was my first book, period, so it’s the oldest of my literary brood and claims its crown as a modern underground classic.
AOTR: What convinced you to write your first book and where did the inspiration come from?
Aberjhani: That would be “I Made My Boy Out of Poetry” as just noted. It developed out of a very active literary scene in Savannah, Georgia, during the 1990s. I was deeply involved with the Savannah Writers Workshop and the Poetry Society of Georgia, as well as with a very strong spoken word movement, so I was constantly generating both prose and poetry to present at public events. A lot of the work was inspired by personal tragedies and the very real need to find a way to believe in life and love again. At some point, it simply felt natural and like the right time to put my first book out there. Fortunately, I was blessed for that first edition with cover art by Gustave Blache III, who gave me permission to use his painting, “Portrait of a Young Man/Artist Spirit” which recently sold in a New Orleans art auction for a healthy five figures.
AOTR: What do you hope readers will feel or take away after completing one of your books?
Aberjhani: I hope they will feel like they just enjoyed a small feast for their mind, body, and soul, and that this small feast treated them to flavors they had not known before and perhaps both awakened and satisfied hungers they had not known they had.
AOTR: In a few words tell a reader why they should read one of your books next.
Aberjhani: Because it will likely take you into regions of rich emotional experience, intellectual stimulation, and psychospiritual adventures you will find exciting to discover, indulge, and revisit.
AOTR: Are you currently working on any books now?
Aberjhani: Interestingly enough, I’m currently working as part of an editorial team for a series of books on the Civil War and urban slavery in the United States’ Southeast. I’m trying hard to concentrate on nothing but that, but work as an editor has a way of sparking ideas so I am also working on the second edition of “The American Poet Who Went Home Again” and on a play about the tragicomic ups and downs of our contemporary times. But aside from books, I’ve been pretty busy this past year with my African-American Art Examiner column at http://www.examiner.com/x-16968-AfricanA...
AOTR: When you are not writing what do you like to do?
Aberjhani: Watch films, listen to music, go to museums or art galleries, spend more money on books than my budget allows, and visit friends or family.
AOTR: Name three words to describe you.
Aberjhani: Creative, Blessed, Grateful.
AOTR: Do you have a motto?
Aberjhani: That would be this: “When stuck between rocks and hard places, use the pain of the pressure to create diamonds.” But I’ve also actually lived, and have the life scars to prove it, a great deal of my life based on the biblical first book of Corinthians, chapter thirteen.
AOTR: What do you hope to accomplish in the literary world?
Aberjhani: I hope to create worthwhile literary legacies that provide moments of relief, entertainment, or empowerment within a given individual’s life.
AOTR: How can readers find out more about you or order your books?
Aberjhani: By visiting my Authors Guild website at http://www.aberjhani.com or my author page on Amazon at http://www.amazon.com/Aberjhani/e/B001KH...
They can also check me out at the Red Room Hall of Fame, which includes writers like Maya Angelou, Terry McMillan, Ishmael Reed, and President Barack Obama as well. And of course I can’t leave out Goodreads, Creative Thinkers International, Twitter, AuthorsDen, LibraryThing, Shelfari, MySpace and…
AOTR: Thanks for you time! Continued Success!
Aberjhani's 10 favorite things
Book:“Beloved” by Toni Morrison and “Shadow of the Wind” by Carlos Ruiz Zafon.
Social networking site: Creative Thinkers International.
Dessert:Strawberry shortcake or peach cobbler.
Past time:Falling more deeply in love with life every day.
Poet:Jay Wright, Nikki Giovanni, Rumi.
Sports:Dancing.
Color:Gold and/or blue-violet.
Season:Autumn.
City or town: Anyplace where I can sense that people at least attempt to live love.
Drink: I am such a coffee addict. Became one while stationed with the Air Force in Alaska.
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Authors On The Rise Interviews Author Push Nevahda
Authors On The Rise is happy to bring you an interview from author Push Nevahda. Enjoy!
AOTR: Briefly tell us about you and your book.
PN: My name is Jeremy Williams, and I also write under the pen name, Push Nevahda. I’m 41, and a native of Detroit Michigan. I am a graduate of Michigan State University in East Lansing, MI, and I’m currently finishing up a master’s degree in African American history. My new book is titled Detroit: The Black Bottom Community. It is currently available in all major retail outlets. My parents migrated from the south and eventually settled in Detroit’s Black Bottom community. My father and my mother went on their first date to Black Bottom’s famous Flame Bar to see Billie Holiday perform.
AOTR: When did you first begin writing and why?
PN: I think writers are born. I think that people can learn technical writing such as journalism. But writers are born.
AOTR: Describe how it felt seeing your name in print for the first time.
PN: While I don’t believe that a writer needs to be published in order to be considered a writer, I certainly felt a sense of confidence and achievement seeing my book on the shelf of Barnes & Noble.
AOTR: With so many books in print, what sets your book apart?
PN: Black Bottom had never been studied as an exclusive study. Also, my book is a photo-essay which illuminates the perspective and brings the reader into the visual experience.
AOTR: Have you faced any obstacles as an author? If so please share one lesson you've learned.
PN: The only serious obstacle that any author would face is one of leisure and time to write. Certainly I’ve encounter those matters, but I’ve since learned to sacrifice everything else for sake of time and leisure.
AOTR: How do you handle writers block or does writing flow naturally for you?
PN: Writers block means it’s time to put down the pen and pick up a book. That’s what I do.
AOTR: Finish this sentence. If I were not an author I would be...
PN:…a comedian. Whatever the case, I would be an artist because I was born one.
AOTR: When a reader finishes the last page of your book what do you hope they take away?
PN: I don’t know. I would hope that they would simply have an experience. That’s all any writer can really hope to achieve, or hope to give a reader. I think it’s just as important for the writer to walk away from his/her own book having transformed themselves to another plateau or level in life. After all, writers are writing for themselves as well, if not solely. This is why the best of Emily Dickinson’s work was published posthumously.
AOTR: Where do you hope to be ten years from now in your writing career?
PN: It would be great to be on the bestseller’s list, and/or win a Pulitzer, but none of that is necessary for me to feel any better or worse about the craft of writing. So, I would be content to just still be able to write, teach, and have the same passion for literature that I have now. Writing, for me, is the same as breathing, for you.
AOTR: How can readers contact you or find out more information about your book?
PN: www.pushnevahda.com / 313 929-9022
AOTR: Thanks for your time. Much Success!
Nevahda's ten favorite things:
Drink: water
Cookie: chocolate chip
Quote: “You have asked me what I would do and what I would not do. I will tell you what I will do and what I will not do. I will not serve that in which I no longer believe, whether it call itself my home, my fatherland, or my church: and I will try to express myself in some mode of life or art as freely as I can and as wholly as I can, using my defence the only arms I allow myself to use - silence, exile, and cunning.” –James Joyce
Site on the internet: Facebook
Shopping Center: Camelback in Scottsdale AZ; Tanger in Howell MI
Movie: Raisin in the Sun
Snack: sunflower seeds
Restaurant: Motown Grille, Detroit MI
Shoe: Hippopotamus boots
Sports: none
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