"Chronicling one year in the life of a queer couple facing life-threatening illness, this sequence of poems explore what words can do to hold off loss and death while living on in a world of injustice and sorrow"-- Provided by publisher
Minnie Bruce Pratt Books
Minnie Bruce Pratt is a respected American writer whose work excavates the intersections of race, class, gender, and sexuality. Drawing from her background as an activist and educator, her writing consistently explores themes of identity and social injustice. Pratt is recognized for her incisive analytical approach and stylistic precision, offering readers profound insights into complex societal issues. Her work challenges readers to reflect and fosters a critical understanding of the world.



Politics. Cultural Writing. New to SPD. The award-winning feminist and lesbian press Firebrand Books closed its doors last year after sixteen years in the business. The authors of YOURS IN STRUGGLE -- Elly Bulkin, Minnie Bruce Pratt, and Barbara Smith -- have now made the 1988 Firebrand edition of their collaborative work available through SPD. They write, YOURS IN STRUGGLE happened because we were able to talk to each other in the fist place, despite our very different identities and backgrounds -- white Christian-raised Southerner, Afro-American, Ashkenazi Jew. Each of us speaks only for herself, and we do not necessarily agree with each other. Yet we believe our cooperation on this book indicates concrete possibilities for coalition work.
Walking Back Up Depot Street: Poems
- 88 pages
- 4 hours of reading
The narrative unfolds through the perspective of Beatrice, a white woman, capturing the rich tapestry of voices from the Bible Belt, including preachers, blues singers, and sharecropper women. It weaves together testimonies from freed slaves, white abolitionists, and labor activists, reflecting on themes of history, resilience, and social justice. The poems evoke the struggles and triumphs of marginalized communities, incorporating elements of music and speech from pivotal moments in American history, creating a powerful homage to collective memory and identity.