Bambara, Toni Cade (Vol. 19) - Susan Lardner
SUSAN LARDNER
The stories [in "Gorilla, My Love" and "The Sea Birds Are Still Alive"], describing the lives of black people in the North and the South, could be more exactly typed as vignettes and significant anecdotes, although a few of them are fairly long. Some of them are shapelier than others, steadier in tone, more compact; all are notable for their purposefulness, a more or less explicit inspirational angle, and a distinctive motion of the prose, which swings from colloquial narrative to precarious metaphorical heights and over to street talk, at which Bambara is unbeatableā¦.
Although there are traces in Bambara's work of sexual conflict, traditional and contemporary brands, and although the women are naturally more prominent and more deeply described, there isn't a shortage of admirable menā¦. (p. 169)
Certain topics and rhetorical turns place Bambara chronologically and politically. A key story in this respect is "Broken Field Running,"...
[The entire page is 726 words long]
