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I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
Price: $3.79
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I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou... I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya AngelouTranslation and Introduction by David Magarshack... (Paperback, 1980)... Description: Bantam Books, 1980. Paperback; 246pp... Condition: Good-minus Condition. (See my Scan). Reading creases to outer/spine, but no apparent cracking to...
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Maya Angelou
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
by Maya AngelouTranslation and Introduction by David Magarshack(Paperback, 1980)
Description: Bantam Books, 1980. Paperback; 246pp.
Condition: Good-minus Condition. (See my Scan). Reading creases to outer/spine, but no apparent cracking to binding =tight/intact. No apparent marking to text. Pages are tanned/aged. Cover has aging, edgewear some small creasing, and reading creases already mentioned to outer spine. (See my scan/photo.)
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56 of 61 people found the following review helpful:
The early years of Maya Angelou, March 30, 2001
By Michael J. Mazza (Pittsburgh, PA USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
"I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," by Maya Angelou, is the first volume in this author's extraordinary series of autobiographical narratives. "I Know..." begins with her childhood and takes us into her young womanhood. This book has, since its publication, become a beloved contemporary classic of African-American literature.
After their parents' separation, young Marguerite (her given name) and her brother, Bailey, are sent to live with their strong-willed grandmother in Stamps, Arkansas, deep in the segregated South. Angelou also describes her time spent with her other grandmother in St. Louis, as well as her young adulthood in San Francisco. The overall time period of the book overlaps that of World War II.
"I Know..." offers important insights into the world of racial segregation, and painfully records the toll taken by racism in its various forms. Also powerful and important is Angelou's recollection of surviving a brutal sexual assault when she was a child. Angelou recalls vividly the authors who made an impact on her during her childhood and young adulthood: James Weldon Johnson, Edgar Allan Poe, William Shakespeare, and others. The book concludes with her sexual awakening as a young woman.
"I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings" is an American classic which has lost none of its power in the 30 years since it first appeared. Angelou's prose is direct and personal, and marked with passages of wit and beauty. For scholars of African-American literature, women's studies, or literary autobiography, this is an essential volume.
30 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
I agree this book is amazing., March 26, 2004
By D. Mabey - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Hardcover)
In a poetic, yet detatched way, Maya Angelou captures the heart of her struggles growing up female and Black during the Depression. Her style and description draw in the reader and keep her spellbound even during the most painful scenes. You feel deeply for the author and her little brother as they drift through their lives living for a bit of affection. Neglected by their divorced parents, Maya and her brother get sent to Arkansas at ages 4 and 5 to live with their grandma and handicapped uncle. Although life is hard and love not demonstrated, Maya learns much from her grandma and uncle.
The theme of this book is the quest for the child to be loved by the adult. Maya feels inferior. She feels ugly and compares herself to her magical brother Bailey. Both children are starved for true affection and daydream a white movie actress on the screen is their long lost mother.
Maya and her brother are eventually united with "Mother Dear" in St.Louis when she is eight. Unfortunately Mother's boyfriend begins to abuse Maya(...). This is graphically portrayed in the book. Maya's feelings of not belonging and not being truly loved are compounded after the abuse.
I admire all the autobiographical books by Ms.Angelou. She has achieved a lot in her life for a person who started out in such a sad situation.
This book should be read and re-read.
45 of 52 people found the following review helpful:
A very moving life story, January 26, 2002
By Stephan Nance (Eugene, OR USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
I don't remember who, but someone once said something like, "One death is a tragedy, but a thousand deaths is just statistic." This is sort of the way to describe the way I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings impacts the reader. Through her story, you can really come to understand the life of an American black female in the 1930s. From the first years of Maya Angelou's childhood, life was very difficult. Shipped away from her parents to live with her grandmother in Stamps, Arkansas, pretending for years that the reason she lived with her grandmother was because her parents were dead...then finding out that her parents were in fact alive, making it seem as if Maya was not wanted. In a segregated town full of prejudicce and injustice, Maya lives until around age 7, when she is finally taken to live with her mother. Although this may seem to be a change for the better, things take a turn when young Maya is raped by her mother's boyfriend, Mr. Freeman. When Mr. Freeman is put on trial and is later murdered, Maya believes it is her fault and stops talking. After a long time of silence, Maya meets people who will change her life forever, including Mrs. Flowers, who introduces Maya to the wonderful world of poetry. With the help of Maya's mother, Mrs. Flowers, and other influential people and situations, could Maya finally find happiness? Everyone should read this book, because it reveals the true emotions and feelings that were felt by American blacks. This book will make you cry, laugh, and run right out to buy the sequel, Gather Together In My Name.
14 of 14 people found the following review helpful:
An adult review--and one teacher's viewpoint, June 8, 2000
By Michele Eshleman (Colorado, US) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
May I tell you why I choose to have my ninth grade students read it? I have noticed a lot of reviews by young people, which I applaud, but an adult perspective might be helpful.
I don't particularly feel the need to defend its merits. (I am not articulate enough to do justice to that task.) As with any book, some will love it and some won't. Guaranteed, it will make you uncomfortable at times, because one chapter describes the rape of a young person--which is painful for any compassionate human being to hear. Plus, there are other sexual issues, largely stemming from the earlier assault, but also because she is a teenager in the last phase of the book. Such questions about love and sex are characteristic of the teenage years. Many young people, as well as adults, are confused about such topics. While these are generally the most controversial segments from the book, the fundamental lesson of the book goes far beyond the survival of one victim. I won't supply you with the answers as to what one should take away from the text. It is a personal experience for each of us.
We can all learn from Maya's honest account of her childhood journey. We can all try on her experiences and live vicariously through her for a while, and see how it changes our own perspective on what it means to be a human being.
I'll be the first to admit, this book is a challenge for all my students in one way or another. Some because they are white and live in the northern US. Some because they are male and it's difficult to view life through a woman's eyes. Some because of the adult vocabulary and extensive use of figurative language. Some of these experiences are so remote from their own, while others are very close to home. It helps them to see how much we actually do have in common with those who at first seem very different. They all can benefit from reading it, if they give it a chance. (Adults may be better equiped to appreciate fully this text. However, young people can take so much from it. Maybe one day, we can have an abridged version, so it is still rich in language and meaning, yet condensed so more young people can access its many gifts.)
Beyond the darkness of some of those experiences (discrimination, rape, humilation and fear) lies a powerful sense of hope, dignity, determination and resilience. One of my favorite aspects of the book is its emphasis on the power of education, language and literacy. Throughout Maya's life--books, poetry, impassioned voices have all inspired her. Her autobiography is a moving tribute to a literate way of life and an enduring legacy to that tradition.
13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
Brilliant!, May 31, 2000
By Aussie Jan (Bendigo, Australia) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Hardcover)
Maya Angelou can write, there is no question about that. Her descriptions in this book are so vivid and expressive that I feel, in a small way, I know what it might have been like to live in Arkansas during the 1940s.
I found in the reviews that there seemed to be 2 reasons that people didn't like this book:
1) kids forced to read it for school - I'm not surprised. If I was 14, I probably would have hated it too. Kids want books with action and a story.
2) suggestions that Maya Angelou is a racist - this book is told through the eyes of a young black girl who rarely met a white person and those she met treated her in ways that stripped her of her dignity and her personhood. Any negative feelings she had are entirely understandable.
Maya writes with honesty and such feeling that at times it is almost painful to read but I'm glad I did. I'll never know what it feels like to be black and the target of bigotry but Maya has helped me understand just a little by letting me walk a while in her shoes.
27 of 31 people found the following review helpful:
A good book, although the ending is rushed., December 2, 1999
By Elizabeth Green (London, England) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
I was intrigued by the mixed ratings of this book & the various comments about Maya Angelou being racist towards whites. This book is written throught the eyes of a young black child growing up in a community where there is segregation & discrimination on account of skin colour. To see 'differences' between 'black' & 'white' is something she has grown up with.
Taken by her Grandmother with severe toothache to a white dentist (the black dentist being a days journey away), Maya is refused treatment with the excuse - "I'd rather put my hand in a dogs mouth than in some niggah." This man had borrowed money from Maya's Grandmother to keep his surgery open during the depression. He refuses to treat a 'black' child......but 'black' money is 'acceptable'. With such hypocrisy, surely you can understand how Maya would feel a little disgruntled towards her white countrymen? Who wouldn't?
Being a 'white' female, I will probably never encounter such racial discrimination or even understand how another person prejudices could effect your own peace of mind. Read it & remind yourself of the similarities between human beings rather than superficial differences.
12 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
Review:, September 25, 2003
By T. Postell "mortal_belleza" (Montgomery, Al, USA) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
This books is the first of five books written about Maya Angelou (born Marguerite Johnson) chronicling her own life. She--and her brother Bailey--were sent to the Jim Crow South to live with their grandmother at a very young age. In this book, we follow her from childhood in Stamps, Arkansas to adulthood in WWII San Francisco.
I don't know why I haven't read this book sooner. I admire Maya Angelou as a speaker and a poet, but it took something like Banned Books Week to make me get off my ass and read this book. I've had this book for a couple of years. I remember there was an excerpt from this book in my English 101 book when I first started college. I kept telling myself that I was going to read it soon, and I finally have.
I can see why the subject matter would concern some people, but I don't think this should be pulled from schools. I don't believe that she ever intended for this to be on a school's reading list, but it is (on some), and I think that it should stay there. It doesn't glorify racism or sexual abuse. Instead, it seems to teach a lesson and speak warnings.
Angelou's writing was candid. She didn't hold back about her life and the hardships that she encountered. She shares an honest view on racism and sexual abuse. The writing takes on a more personal tone that makes it easy to read. And of course, this was all related with a eloquent, poetical prose style that is uniquely Angelou.
10 of 10 people found the following review helpful:
Misleading Warnings, January 11, 2005
By Elyse - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
Going into my freshman year of high school and my first honors english class I was told by my church to beware of the evil book they would force me to read-- I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. It was protested because of the vivid picture painted of her sexual abuse. After reading it I can only shake my head at the people who warned me of this book. By refusing to read it because of something horrible happening to someone you fail to really realise that things of that nature happen. Reading this book was an eyeopener to me-- to understand just where people like Maya come from. I was riveted throughout this book. Easily it is one of the better books I've read.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
My review of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, October 2, 2003
By Muriel Muex - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
Book Review
Title: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
Author: Maya Angelou
Genre: Non-Fiction - Autobiographical
Length: 290 pages
By: Muriel Muex
Course: Intro to Sociology
Professor: Steve Zegel
September 19, 2003
I chose I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings by Ms. Maya Angelou for my book review because of its universal appeal. Even the title of the book grabs your attention; it makes you want to ask the question, why does the caged bird sing? It speaks not only to black people in general and black women specifically, but to everyone. No matter your race or gender, anyone can relate to the story of Ms. Angelou's life and experiences as they unfold. Ms. Angelou has a flair for utilizing colorful imagery and symbolism to convey her life experiences. She tells her story so vividly, she makes you feel as if you are experiencing every excruciating moment right along with her. Despite all the trials and tribulations, her story offers insight and wisdom and inspires hope for every reader.
Ms. Angelou wrote this book in the mid 60's while living in New York City. It is a chronological rendition of her life starting in the 1930's when she was a child living in the small southern town of Stamps, Arkansas. It is written during a time when black men and women, including all western women, were trying to develop a sense of identity (Scott, Oreen - A Women too Young to be Old, Book Review). There are many themes prevalent in Ms. Angelou's book. It is rife with prejudices of black versus white, male versus female, ugly versus beautiful, rich versus poor; all of which focus on Henslins' conflict theorists (Henslin, 2003). Her grandmother's store is the center of Maya's childhood and the gathering place for blacks in the town. It symbolizes her anchor in life and how she defines who she is. When Maya dons her Easter dress, she envisions a transformation taking place revealing her true self, or how she wishes herself to be, blue-eyed blond and beautiful rather than black ugly and nappy headed. This ties into Henslin's symbolic interactionism (Henslin 2003).
It is a story of a young black girl dealing with abandonment by her parents and growing up amidst racism, segregation, lynchings, beatings and more. It is a story of child molestation and surviving in a hostile world with the strength of family ties and religion to sustain you. It is a story of persevering to obtain goals being held from you just because of the color of your skin and gender. It is a story that is both beautifully and inspiringly told. Ms. Angelou confronts her own life with such moving wonder and dignity (Baldwin, 1969), that you, the reader, are also inspired.
Ms. Angelou's autobiography relates to many sociological perspectives where people's social experiences underlie their behavior (Henslin, 2003). It touches on social structure and how it establishes limits on our behavior, shaping our perceptions and attitudes (Henslin, 2003). This is evidenced by Grandmother Henderson mutely standing in front of her store while four little white girls act shamefully. One of them does a handstand to show she's not wearing any underwear while the others taunt and tease her knowing she can't berate them for their bad behavior. Maya gets angry realizing this is the reality of things and that black people in Stamps have to be very respectful of all white people no matter what they do or how they behave if they want to survive.
This is a genre I normally don't read, but after reading this book I was compelled to read the remaining books in her autobiographical series. I thoroughly enjoyed every one of them and would recommend them without hesitation. I know why the caged bird sings, do you?
References
Baldwin, James, Book Review, (1969) Review comments on I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
Henslin, James M., Essentials of Sociology A Down-to-Earth Approach, (5th edition), Pgs. 2-3, 12, 15, and 83-84
Scott, Oreen - A Women too Young to be Old - Book Review (September 20, 2003), http://www.oreenscott.com/maya_angelou.htm.
9 of 9 people found the following review helpful:
Caged Bird: From Fear to Freedom, January 18, 2003
By Martin Asiner (jersey city, nj United States) - See all my reviews
This review is from: I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Mass Market Paperback)
Maya Angelou was born into a society that was as rigidly stratified as any other in the world. Sometimes this stratification is based on religion, or on ethnic caste, or as in the United States, on skin color. What most often happens is that the favored color takes certain things for granted: upward mobility is within reach, respect is expected, and laws are meant for all (of that color). The subordinate color learns the inverse. In I KNOW WHY THE CAGED BIRD SINGS, Maya, as a child, learns all that plus she conspires against herself and her color. She sees whiteness as a desirable trait, blackness as not. In fact, her early life in Stamps is one prolonged immersion in what she terms a 'black ugly dream.' To compound her dilemma, she faces gender discrimination. Boys on the black pecking order occupy a rung higher. Yet despite all this, Maya even manages to overcome the trauma of rape at the age of eight from a trusted family friend. What Maya takes out of this act of violation is her realization that the ogre of life can be shut down if she learns to shut herself down. For months afterwards, she is deliberately mute. Her silence screams volumes while her soul decides how to heal itself. Eventually, Maya finds solace in the way that all trod on underdogs do: by self-betterment. With the help of her brother Bailey and god-fearing family, Maya discovers that the key to her rebirth lies first in books, then later in extracting nuggets of wisdom from those books which she can apply to her life.
The careful reader will surely note that even the very young Maya is exceptionally erudite and glib. This is more a function of the adult Maya structuring her memories enriched with a lifetime of learning from those memories than it is of a precocious child. The grown woman Maya Angelou is a superb writer who uses the traditional devices of figurative language, a sense of the power of the spoken word, and a wide ranging use of symbols, all of which add up to a story that never palls or drags. By the time the reader gets to the end, this reader can see that the journey of a little girl who made the rounds of a short life of physical and emotional bounces has learned from a book what that girl so painfully endured: that freedom can only be achieved if fear is first confronted then beaten down.
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On Oct-22-08 at 13:10:26 PDT, seller added the following information:Please Note: Our shipping amounts in our listings, shipping discounts, & shipping promotions are ONLY for orders within the U.S.A. Thank-you for understanding!! On Jan-26-09 at 11:15:58 PST, seller added the following information:International Buyers – Please Note:
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