Last week, Kym gave you an introduction to our current Read With Us selection, How to Say Babylon. This week I'm going to tell you a little bit more about this memoir by Safiya Sinclair. In simple terms, the book is about growing up in Jamaica with a strict and controlling Rastafarian father and how the author struggled and came to find her own power. But there is much more to it than that.
I just finished Babylon last week and because it was due back at the library, I'm not sure I'll have a chance to reread it before our discussion. I've been trying to search out some more information about Sinclair in the hope this might help me to better understand her. I've read interviews with her, read her poetry, and even found an interview she did with Tara Westover. I'm going to share some bits and pieces with you that I found helpful.
This Pen Ten interview from 2017 helped me to better understand Sinclair's journey as a writer and poet. This paragraph about when she began considering what kind of poet she wanted to be was especially illuminating for me:
"However, I would say that coming to America as a college student is the first time I really considered what kind of poet I wanted to be. I brought my work into a Bennington College workshop when a white student crossed out any references to Jamaican flora and fauna she didn’t recognize, scratching out the Jamaican patois, remarking “Can you say this in English?” And that was the moment I decided that my responsibility as a poet was to always keep my gaze centered on my Jamaican landscape, to tell the stories of Jamaican womanhood, of blackness and marginalization, to write against postcolonial history and nurture anti-colonial selfhood. To leave no space, no place, not even a sliver of consideration for the venal hegemony of whiteness in my imagination; dark, beautiful, and untamed."
(I did have to look up venal hegemony and it sounds like it might be dominance capable of being bribed. If her main goal is to focus on Jamaica and tell the stories of Jamaican womanhood, Blackness, and marginalization, I would say that she is succeeding.)
Because Sinclair's poem Silver figures largely in How to Say Babylon, I wanted to read the whole thing. It was difficult to track down (it turns out it's on the endpapers of the hardcover version of the book), but I'm going to leave it here in case you might also learn something from reading it.
Silver flows through my veins
Into my hands when I caress the strings
of my guitar
Silver is the moon I swallowed
on a dry dreary night when I willed it so
silver is the rain in May
wholesome and lithe and falling into me
Our springtime sarabande kisses me sodden
up then I'm happy
down then I'm sad
Silver I cry Silver
Silver encases my heart
like a drunk jeweller quenching a cigarette
silver is my lips against the ice
my tongue against the frost
the sweet staccato
my praline dress
my stuck umbrella on a sunshiny day
Silver is the witty wind
coaxing my eyes to sleep
upon the blurred pastel pages
of a slipshod butterfly
Silver is a legerdemain
Legs like a leprechaun that feeds on leer
and lemons
A quire of my deepest thoughts
the inkling of my most secret soul
It is the palsied web
of the crestfallen spider
the ugly dewdrop ring
that scars my finger like acid
dusk that brings the sidereal night
resting its echo upon the wing
of a firefly that drinks the silver from my eyes
Silver is my billowing meerschaum
is the flicking goldfish fin in the silent sun
silver are the wispy strands in my hair
lined silver spiralling through the universe
Silver chose me
like starlight to the naked eye
the words I bleed are silver
the time that dances minuets
upon my broken sylvan skin,
is silver in a lancer's armor
when my stomach bursts
and I disgorge eternity
silver stands beside me
fondling the viol
The weight, the wind, are uxurious
for they are solely silver
ever heading my way
My ears are filled with a pixie's dreams
like honey only Silver
when the days of maiden's trouble subside
silver peels away
My belly swells
and it'll be a while
but I know more silver
is welling
inside
Lastly, here is a video of Safiya Sinclair being interviewed by Tara Westover, author of Educated, at the Center for Fiction They have more than a few things in common, but there are also many differences. I loved how Westover let Safiya Sinclair tell her story. It's over an hour long, but maybe you'll find an opportunity to listen to it.
How to Say Babylon is currently available from Amazon in hardcover ($15.55) or Kindle ($14.99), or from Audible. You can check your local bookstores for a copy — and, of course, the book should also be available at most libraries. I had to wait about two and a half weeks for the audio version, and after I had some difficulty understanding "spoken Jamaican" I had another almost three-week wait for the Kindle version. Reading and listening to both versions worked well for me.
Our book discussion day for How to Say Babylon will be Tuesday, June 11, 2024. Carole, Kym, and I will each post discussion questions on our blogs that day, and then at 7:00 pm Eastern time we’ll be hosting the always educational and fun live book discussion on Zoom. I have some questions about this book, but I always come away from our discussions with a better understanding. I'm counting on all of you!
Thank you for sharing both the poem (which I've been wanting to read) and the interview, which I will watch/listen to later.
ReplyDeleteOne of the things I like best about reading memoirs . . . is that they aren't fiction, but they often read like fiction. Which, of course, makes me - as a longtime, reader of mostly fiction - tend to see it with my "fiction eyes." But, for the author of a memoir, it's not fiction. It's the story of their life - and often, it's still very much in process. With Safiya's memoir, I had to remind myself quite often . . . this is her LIFE! Memoir is a fascinating genre . . .
ReplyDeleteThank you so much for finding and sharing her poem, Silver! And the interview sounds great. I look forward to watching it soon.
As I mentioned on Kym's blog, this is not a book I would have picked up on my own (just one of the things I love about our group!!). It's a pretty amazing story and one I am looking forward to discussing.
ReplyDeleteThank you for sharing the poem Silver in it's entirety. I think a lot of it goes right over my head but I'm still glad I could read it.
ReplyDeleteI am saving this post and all its content for later this week! Thank you for that video link Bonny! (and that poem is really wonderful!)
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