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My mom tells a story from when she was in college in Kentucky. It had snowed overnight, heavily and unexpectedly, but students were still expected to be in class that morning. On campus was a famously steep hill, unpleasant even in good weather. This snow-covered day in the late 1960s, my mother slipped and slogged her way to that spot - almost certainly in a skirt and non-sensible shoes - to find the members of the football team lined up in two rows all the way up the hill. Hand by hand, they helped people up the hill, passing each pedestrian up the chain like a track baton, ensuring their safe passage. It is a charming story.


We all have stories from our past, some pleasant and charming, some freighted with darkness and trauma. In the past few weeks, I have read several pieces that reckon with the stories we tell of our past, perhaps none more extraordinary than Nikki Grimes's memoir-in-verse Ordinary Hazards.



Right from the start, Grimes acknowledges the flawed nature of memory, the effort it takes to fill in the gaps without misrepresenting the truth. As a poet, Grimes intentionally limits her form, allowing the line breaks and foreshortened structure to mirror the necessarily fragmented and enjambed nature of memory. She opens with the years 1950-1955 and a quote from "Let Me Tell You How to Meet the Day" by poet Mari Evans. In this first section, Grimes describes choosing her name ("Nickname is the word / I plucked it from when I was six. / I immediately liked / the hard k of it, which sounded / firm and looked like a sturdily braced wall,") and of some of the immediate difficulties of her young life. The title of the book comes from the poem "On Our Own" in this first section, which opens

No one warned me

the world was full of

ordinary hazards

like closets with locks and keys.


The reader understands that Grimes will be telling a story full of pain, but in every section, in almost every line, she insists on a light in all the darkness.


Book Two covers the next five years of her life, a time of relative stability, and the time within which she discovers the power of words. Her readers are thankful for this revelation, and the power of her words is undeniable, as evidenced by the poem "One Year Gone:"


God deals days

like a deck of cards,

shuffling and counting out

kings, hearts, jokers

fast as lightning.

His hand is quicker

than my eye.


In Book Three, the poems broaden, alternate structures, stretch themselves out as Grimes herself must have stretched during this season of adolescence. This section also includes details of the harsh realities Grimes faced, including her mother's mental illness and the abuse she suffered at the hands of her mother's new husband. It is gut-wrenching to read as is her poem "Grandma Sally" about her refusal to visit her mother's grandma down South. It concludes with


I'll just have to meet her

on the other side, where racism

has been excised

and justice is

as common as dirt.


Though it faces the truth of violent racism, that last line is so full of hope, something we can all aim for. Justice as common as dirt!

Book Four, the final section, takes the reader through 1966. It opens with a passage from 2 Samuel and this note from the author:


My narrative's a puzzle.

What's next and next and next

I couldn't say.

The moments, hours, days

a jumble.

The only thread connecting them

is me, and even then

the thread is frayed -

the break, at most,

a hair's breadth away.


I read this book weeks ago. It has taken some time for me to find my way back to my voice in the tumult and turmoil of protests and police brutality and injustice as common as dirt. I chose threads as the touchstone word for this review because of the way so much of my reading and thinking has interwoven since then, completely forgetting this beautiful note until I gathered my thoughts to write. That thread may be frayed, but it remains a connective stitch for me and likely for others.


This past Sunday, I chose Nikki Giovanni as the focus of my weekly poetry series. She is an icon and a hero of mine, and besides sharing their initials and first name, the threads connecting these two women are tightly woven. Nikki Giovanni's "Nikki-Rosa" does some of the same work Nikki Grimes's Ordinary Hazards does. Both can look at the hard, even tragic, circumstances of their lives and see the beauty and grace in them. Today I discovered Giovanni blurbed Grimes's book. In this rambling conversation between Giovanni and superstar Clint Smith, Giovanni mentions her abiding friendship with poet Mari Evans (are you starting to see the connections?). Evans passed away mere months later, after walking with Giovanni as a friend and a mentor just as Giovanni may now be walking with Grimes. The point of the event was to discuss Giovanni's friendship with James Baldwin, whose interview with Studs Terkel I had just listened to and whose interview with Esquire I had just read and then sent to the mayor of my city, urging his active response to the voices echoing Baldwin today.


The thread tightens further in the Epilogue of Grimes's book. To understand, let's back up to the season in Grimes's life when her relationship with her musician father is restored. He is a beacon of encouragement and inspiration for her, signing her up for a poetry reading at the Countee Cullen library. She explains the importance of that moment,


And, like magic,

my breathing slowed,

and I rose

to the occasion,

reading my poem

in a clear voice,

my father's faith

and loving gaze

holding me steady

as promised.


Later, he takes her to a celebration of Lorraine Hansberry, and she sees from a distance a man surrounded by fans, a "famous author." That evening opened the door for Grimes to see herself as a star, to recognize, as she puts it, "not all stars in the firmament / were white." Later still, when she asks him why he'd taken her to a movie and then fell asleep, he responds, "what really mattered / was that I have the chance to see / all there was of black beauty / and music and magic in the world. / Otherwise, what would I weave / into my stories?" Now we come to the Epilogue, where the aspiring writer, believing in her beauty and potential, attends a program celebrating the life of Malcolm X. There, she watches as the "famous author" from years before speaks, there she catches him on his way out of the auditorium:


"Mr. Baldwin!" I manage, breathless,

"I'm a writer, too.

Could you look at my work

and tell me what you think?"


He agrees, reads her work, and looks at her "one serious writer to another." In this moment, the world opens up for the author just as the book comes to a close. And the thread, that thread of "black beauty and music and magic" continues its woven work.


Like those boys in my mom's story, handing their fellow students up the hill, so, too, can we trace the long, beautiful, difficult history of Black writers handing their fellow writers up the hill, helping them ascend despite racism and discrimination and pain. I look forward to the day, someday soon, when that hill stops being so steep, and when those hands reach out purely in love and not out of necessity.


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The best books spark the best conversations! If you have thoughts to share, please feel free to email me at sarabethwest52@gmail.com. I promise a reply. 

Every Wednesday, I send out something of a hodgepodge of ideas, a gathering of thoughts on books, culture, and unexpected moments of joy. Sign up here to stay in the loop!



Look, I am tired, and I am scared, and I am hopeful. I am confused, and I am anxious, and I am hopeful. I am quiet, and I am uncertain, and I am hopeful. No collection to trumpet about today except the collected works of one Nikki Giovanni, a woman who has inspired and energized me for many years, and whose birthday is today. And here, in her poem "Nikki-Rosa," she proves once more that she's always known what's up:


childhood remembrances are always a drag

if you're Black

you always remember things like living in Woodlawn

with no inside toilet

and if you become famous or something

they never talk about how happy you were to have

your mother

all to yourself and

how good the water felt when you got your bath

from one of those

big tubs that folk in chicago barbecue in

and somehow when you talk about home

it never gets across how much you

understood their feelings

as the whole family attended meetings about Hollydale

and even though you remember

your biographers never understand

your father's pain as he sells his stock

and another dream goes

And though you're poor it isn't poverty that

concerns you

and though they fought a lot

it isn't your father's drinking that makes any difference

but only that everybody is together and you

and your sister have happy birthdays and very good

Christmasses

and I really hope no white person ever has cause

to write about me

because they never understand

Black love is Black wealth and they'll

probably talk about my hard childhood

and never understand that

all the while I was quite happy


I have this poem in a collection she edited called Shimmy Shimmy Shimmy Like My Sister Kate: Looking at the Harlem Renaissance through Poems. I was fortunate to sit in an audience to hear her for the first time in 1996. She signed this book for me then, and though my dog literally chewed a significant portion of the binding away, I will always consider it a treasured addition to my library.


Want a bit more of her brilliance? Here she is in conversation with Clint Smith talking about James Baldwin, so there's no chance it will not amaze.


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The best books spark the best conversations! If you have thoughts to share, please feel free to email me at sarabethwest52@gmail.com. I promise a reply. 

Every Wednesday, I send out something of a hodgepodge of ideas, a gathering of thoughts on books, culture, and unexpected moments of joy. Sign up here to stay in the loop!

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