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Song of the Shank

Page 56

by Jeffery Renard Allen


  Special thanks to Robert Polito, Michael Anania, Beatriz Badikian, Elizabeth Borque, Fernando Ruiz Lorenzo, Doreen Baingana, Wanjiru June Wainaina, Ed Pavlic, Calvin Baker, Junot Díaz, Edwidge Danticat, Caryl Phillips, Grandmaster Masese, Zanele Ndolvu, Tyehimba Jess, Sandra Goodridge, Fran Gordon, Pamela Fletcher, Randolyn Zinn, Scott Dahlie, Grant Jones, Dr. Brenda Greene, Dr. Patricia Jabbeh Wesley, Mohammed Naseehu Ali, Malaika Adero, Mikhail Iossel, Ramon Garcia, Josephine Ishmon, Kitso Kgaboesele, Matthew Sharpe, Laura Pegram, Josip Novakovich, Jennifer Baker, Sherwin Bitsui, Aleksandar Hemon, Ishmael Reed, Colin Channer, Paula Kling, Elisheba Hagg-Stevens, Shalini Gidoomal, Suhaila Cross, Aldon Nielsen, and Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie for their love, support, and encouragement.

  Special thanks to Martin Donoff, Rene Steinke, David Daniel, and the entire Fairleigh Dickinson crew.

  I am grateful for the guidance of my elders, fathers by another name, for the wisdom in their words and ways: John Wideman, Sterling Plumpp, Quincy Troupe, Arthur Flowers, David Henderson, Keorapetse Kgositsile, and Stanley Crouch.

  Thanks to my agent Cynthia Cannell and all the good folk at Graywolf Press, especially Fiona McCrae and Ethan Nosowsky, for their book smarts.

  Thanks to Creative Capital, the Dorothy L. and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library, the Whiting Foundation, the Ernest J. Gaines Foundation, and the Norman Mailer Center for their patronage.

  A very special thanks to my wonderful kids, Elijah, Jewel, and James, who are a daily source of joy and inspiration and who make me eternally proud. And to the source, my mother, Alice Allen, who taught me how to keep on keeping on and how to make a way out of no way.

  Last, this novel would not be possible without the music of the usual suspects (Jimi, Miles, Bob Marley, Trane, Bird, Muddy, and Mahalia), but also the music of some recent discoveries, namely Oumou Sangare (the world’s greatest singer), Soriba Kouyate, Ayub Ogada, Cesaria Evora, Dawda Jobareth, Miriam Makeba, Richard Bona, Tool, and last but not least Blind Tom, whose life and music transformed me. The circle shall not be broken. Into light, into history …

  Illustration & Epigraph Credits

  Carved Door in Darkness (page 4) is from Sally Price & Richard Price, Maroon Arts, Beacon Press, 1999 (Les arts des Marrons, Vents d’ailleurs, 2005). Reproduced with permission.

  Ancient Dhow (page 100) reproduced courtesy of Robert Barnett Photography.

  “Path of a Hunted Bird” (page 158) is from African Fractals; reproduced courtesy of Ron Eglash.

  Blind Tom and Lerche (page 218) is from Ladies Home Journal, September 1898.

  Harp (page 350), MO.0.0.30371, is from the collection of RMCA Tervuren; photo by J. Van de Vyver, RMCA Tervuren. Reproduced with permission.

  Newspaper advertisement (page 341) is from the National Archives and Records Administration.

  Concert Program cover, special note, and overview (pages 342–344) are from the Library of Congress, Daniel A. P. Murray pamphlet collection, ML417.B3 M3.

  Concert Program (pages 345–347) is from Music and Some Highly Musical People by James M. Trotter, Boston: Lee and Shepard, 1878.

  Dominican Abbey, Ibadan (page 366) reproduced courtesy of Victor Ehikhamenor.

  Harmonograph (page 482) created using www.subblue.com/projects/harmonograph.

  Long Exposure of Ocean Waves at the Beach (page 504) by Joyce Vincent; reproduced courtesy 123RF.

  Carved Door in Light (page 542) from Sally Price & Richard Price, Maroon Arts, Beacon Press, 1999 (Les arts des Marrons, Vents d’ailleurs, 2005).

  The first epigraph is from an unattributed source, the second is an Ewe proverb, and the others are by Frédéric Chopin, Muddy Waters, Hildegard von Bingen, Malcolm X, Skip James, Abbey Lincoln, and Muhummad Ali, respectively.

  JEFFERY RENARD ALLEN is the author of two collections of poetry, Stellar Places (Moyer Bell, 2007) and Harbors and Spirits (Moyer Bell, 1999); a story collection, Holding Pattern (Graywolf, 2008); and the widely celebrated novel Rails Under My Back (Farrar, Straus and Giroux, 2000), which won the Chicago Tribune’s Heartland Prize for Fiction. His other awards include a Whiting Writers’ Award, a support grant from Creative Capital, and the Charles Angoff Award for fiction from the Literary Review. He has been a fellow at the Dorothy L. and Lewis B. Cullman Center for Scholars and Writers at the New York Public Library.

  His essays, reviews, fiction, and poetry have appeared in numerous periodicals and anthologies, including the Chicago Tribune, Poets & Writers, Tri Quarterly, Ploughshares, BOMB, Hambone, StoryQuarterly, Callaloo, Other Voices, Black Renaissance Noire, 110 Stories: New York Writes after September 11, and Homeground: A Guide to the American Landscape.

  Allen was born in Chicago. He holds a PhD in English (creative writing) from the University of Illinois at Chicago and is currently professor of English at Queens College of the City University of New York, an instructor in the graduate writing program at the New School, and an instructor in the low-residency MFA writing program at Fairleigh Dickinson University. He has also taught for Cave Canem; in the Summer Literary Seminars program in St. Petersburg, Russia, and Nairobi, Kenya; for the Farafina Trust Creative Writing Workshop in Lagos, Nigeria; for the VONA/Voices Workshop; and in the writing program at Columbia University. He is the fiction director for the Norman Mailer Center’s Writers Colony, and is also the founder and director of the Pan African Literary Forum, a nonprofit organization that supports and aids writers on the African continent. Allen lives in the Bronx, New York.

  Book design by Ann Sudmeier. Composition by BookMobile Design & Digital Publisher Services, Minneapolis, Minnesota. Manufactured by Edwards Brothers Malloy on acid-free, 100 percent postconsumer wastepaper.

 

 

 


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