" This is the first full-scale biography of Gwendolyn Brooks,
one of America's major poets. George E. Kent, a longtime friend and
literary associate of the poet in Chicago, was given exclusive
access to Brooks' early notebooks, which she kept from the age of
seven. Kent also interviewed Brooks, her mother, and other family
members in Chicago and elsewhere. He scoured records and
correspondence with her publishers, editors, and agent. He
participated in the poet's literary enterprises and in her wide
circle of literary and family friends. The study reveals intimate
acquaintance with the Harlem Renaissance, with the Chicago literary
scene and its leading figures from the thirties on, with historical
developments in black culture and consciousness, and with the
significant figures and activities that impressed the poet's life
and art. It places Brooks' work in the context of the civil rights
movement, the black arts movement, and black nationalism. Gwendolyn
Brooks won the Pulitzer Prize for poetry in 1950 for Annie Allen
and is today widely recognized as one of the nation's leading
poets, yet her work has received less than its due from mainstream
critics. Kent's authoritative book has been one step in correcting
that neglect.
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