A native of Savannah, Georgia (USA) Aberjhani is a winner of the Thomas Jefferson Award for his journalism, the Choice Academic Title and Best History Book Awards for his historical writings, the Creative Loafing Critic’s Pick Best Savannah Author Award for general authorship, and the ...
Different poets and writers have influenced me in different ways at different times throughout my life. The poets of the Harlem Renaissance and the 1960s Black Arts Movements were the ones who inspired and almost compelled me to begin writing poetry as a teenager, especially Langston Hughes, Henry Dumas/Eugene Redmond, and Amiri Baraka. Then in college it was Nikki Giovanni, Federico Garcia Lorca and Pablo Neruda. Some years later when I was managing bookstores I came across the works of Jalaluddin Rumi and read everything I could find by him in English. And more recently, during the composition of The Bridge of Silver Wings, I didn’t feel so much influenced by the Prague poet Rainer Maria Rilke as I felt a kind of kinship with what he experienced while writing his Duino Elegies.
Favorite Books
My favorite books are pretty easy to tell because I generally write reviews about them and post and publish the reviews on in various magazines and websites. Probably the most extensive sample of these is on Amazon.
Favorite Authors
I tend to be extremely passionate about different authors at different times in my life but long-time favorites and influential writers include those of the Harlem Renaissance, Surrealism, the Black Arts Movement, French Commitment (as in Sartre, Camus, Beauvoir, the sometime-in sometimes-out Boris Vian), Ben Okri, a number of contemporary folks and quite a few lesser known types.
What I'm Reading
Taking a hard look at Douglas A. Blackmon's Pulitzer winner "Slavery by Another Name."
ALSO: I recently posted reviews of Carlos Ruiz Zafon's SHADOW OF THE WIND; Andre Gide's THE IMMORALIST; Elizabeth Alexander's Body of Life; and Toni Morrison's What Moves at the Margin. Currently diving into Sister Souljah's second novel, MIDNIGHT, a biography of Yeats, a biography of Rilke, and dipping in and out of several others as well.
National Bookstore Day, November 7, 2009, has to be one of the best ideas anybody has come up with to help celebrate and preserve literary culture in our digitally-revolutionized age in a very long time. It gives me a perfect excuse to scrape up a few bucks and splurge on books other than those needed for research. But now that I think about it a bit more, it also should have been a good excuse ...
What movies are you watching for the holidays? Most people are more likely to think along the lines of movie classics like It's a Wonderful Life (1947) or the more modern The Preacher's Wife (1996) and megastar Jim Carrey's forthcoming Walt Disney blockbuster, A Christmas Carol when it comes to considering films to enjoy with one's family during the holidays. However, a number of films do a ...
The ancient stories told through the work of Savannah, Georgia, artist Phil Starks unfolded in a very modern setting with the opening of his Gaia Earth Goddess and Her 7 Matriarchal Daughters exhibition, scheduled to run from October 23 to November 19, 2009, at the Savannah State University (SSU) Art Gallery. Starks has participated in a number of group shows over the past few years, including ...