June 8, 2003 - FemmeNoir: Dominica RPCV Shay Youngblood

Peace Corps Online: Directory: Dominica: Peace Corps Dominica: The Peace Corps in Dominica: June 8, 2003 - FemmeNoir: Dominica RPCV Shay Youngblood

By Admin1 (admin) on Saturday, June 07, 2003 - 11:15 am: Edit Post

Dominica RPCV Shay Youngblood



Dominica RPCV Shay Youngblood

Shay Youngblood

“From the time I got my first library card I wanted to read all the books in the world."

"If you don't remember nothing else I tell you, baby, you remember this: if you got to dance or dream or anything at all, take it a step at a time and don't let nothing and nobody get in your way when you doing right. I ain't saying it's gonna be easy, but we all got a dance to do. You remember this, you hear?" --The Big Mama Stories

Shay Youngblood is best known for her three enthralling texts, The Big Mama Stories, Soul Kiss and her most recent novel, Black Girl in Paris. Youngblood was born in Columbus, Georgia and has been fascinated with the written word since she first learned how to read.

Reading has been one of Shay Youngblood's most enjoyed activities since the moment, as a child, when she could first understand the words on the page. "The best dream I've ever had, next to the flying dream," she writes, "was the one in which I lived in a library." The author takes long walks several times a week equipped with a pen and a small notebook to capture inspiration. "When I'm deep in a writing project, I take my characters for a walk daily. I clear my mind of everything and try to figure out problems in a scene or just try to let my characters talk to me or to each other, and I write down what they say." The most frightening book that Youngblood has ever read was THE END OF ALICE by A. M. Homes. "The author created a character and a world so believable, so disturbing, so graphic in its visual and emotional violence," Youngblood says with a shudder, "that after I read it, I couldn't go to sleep with the book in my house." (check link on FemmeNoir)

As a young adult Youngblood attended Clark-Atlanta University from which she received a BA in Mass Communications in 1981. She went on to earn a MFA (Master of Fine Arts) in Creative Writing from Brown University in 1993. In addition to writing, Youngblood has worked as public information assistant for WETV in Atlanta and as an agriculture information officer with the Peace Corps in the Dominican Republican.

Ms. Youngblood has taught creative writing at the Syracuse Community Writer's Project, and playwriting at the Rhode Island Adult Correctional Institution for Women and at Brown University. Ms. Youngblood currently lives in New York where she teaches Creative Writing at the New School for Social Research.

Youngblood is recognized as a poet, playwright, fiction writer, and has also written, produced and directed two short videos. She also won a Pushcart Prize for her short story, "Born With Religion." Other awards on Youngblood's impressive list include; the Lorraine Hansberry Playwriting Award, the Astraea Writes' Award and several NAACP Theater Awards. Along with being a writer, she has taught writing at the Syracuse Community Writer's Project, playwriting at the Rhode Island Adult Institution for Women and Brown University. She now resides in New York where she is now teaching creative writing at the New York School for Social Research. She is a member of the Dramatists' and Authors' Guild, the National Writers' Union, and the Writers' Guild of America.

The Big Mama Stories

Many elements of Shay Youngblood's life are reflected in her fiction. Like many of her heroines, Youngblood herself was an orphan at an early age. When her mother died Youngblood was raised by a community family: grandfathers, uncles and many women with similarities to those described in The Big Mama Stories and the play "Shakin' the Mess Outta Misery." The 'mamas' that raised Youngblood taught her "how to be an independent free-thinking person" (Lambda interview) and much about the art of storytelling. A college trip to Haiti and her time spent as an agriculture information officer in the Peace Corps heightened her political awareness that is apparent in much of her writing.

Youngblood states that her first published text, The Big Mama Stories is the closest to autobiographical of all of her works. The compilation of short stories focus around the coming of age of a poor, young African-American girl named Chile. Chile's biological mother, Fannie Mae, has died and so Chile and her brother go to live with a woman called "Big Mama," who raises the children with the help of the entire community.

Soul Kiss

Of these community members, many are women who all help Chile into womanhood through fascinating stories. The story culminates after Chile gets her first period and the Mamas "take her to the river" for a sacred ceremony. This ceremony consists of Chile's many caregivers presenting her with gifts such as African scarves and a Bible. Chile is then anointed with oil and blessed by each mama. As fun, entertaining and touching as the stories are, it is the opinion of some that the writing, as the voice of a pre-adolescent child, is not entirely believable and sometimes feels obvious that an educated adult is speaking rather than an uneducated child.

Soul Kiss, Youngblood's haunting debut novel which nominated her for the Quality Paperback Book New Voices Award, tells the tale of a broken youth who experiences childhood in troubled fragments of time, during a radical time in history. It drips with poetic heaviness and leaves the reader aching with a richness that can't quite be defined. At times, the erotic tone and irony may leave the reader feeling uncomfortable and overwhelmed. However, one can't help feeling but immeasurable tenderness towards lonely Mariah Santos. One wishes to take her in our arms and swallow her pain away. Youngblood's writing is filled to the heart with honest language that flows with an urgency that compels the reader to hungrily devour the book while forcing oneself to let the sad but lyrical words to settle.

Black Girl in Paris

In Shay Youngblood's second novel, Black Girl in Paris, she gives a tour guide through the dreamy streets of Paris as followed by the main character Eden. Eden has fled the deep American South, in search of a childhood dream of a color-blind, liberal atmosphere in which to develop as a writer. The reader gets to delight in Eden's excitement and fear while she clumsily maneuvers through all-new experiences abroad, while encountering metaphorical caricatures along the way. It is the way Youngblood so vividly and beautifully displays these caricatures that allows them and Paris to come alive.

This novel conjures a multitude of feelings and a varied array of emotions and ideas. This story contains, in addition to its literary merits, a profusion of cultural, political, racial and ethnic ideologies. If this book is viewed as a travel guide, many areas of familiarity, as well as unfamiliarity can be encountered. Youngblood uses the metaphor of following a map repeatedly throughout the story. In this novel, Youngblood boldly weaves together ideas of political thought while balancing encounters of intimacy that bring Youngblood's character a subtle sense of hope and beauty at times and places where she needs it most.



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Story Source: FemmeNoir

This story has been posted in the following forums: : Headlines; COS - Dominica; Writing

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