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Short Story Anthologies, African Americans - Fiction & Literature
Breaking Ice by Terry McMillan β€” book cover

Breaking Ice

by Terry McMillan
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About the Author, Terry McMillan

Terry McMillan is the critically acclaimed, award-winning author of five previous novels and recipient of the Essence Award for Excellence in Literature.

Biography

Terry McMillan's previous novels include Mama (1987), (1989), and the New York Times bestsellers Waiting to Exhale (1992) and How Stella Got Her Groove Back (1996), both of which were awarded the NAACP/Black Image Award for Best Novel, and A Day Late and a Dollar Short (2001). McMillan's influential anthology of contemporary African American fiction, Breaking Ice, was published in 1990. Waiting to Exhale was made into a motion picture in 1995, and How Stella Got Her Groove Back came to the screen in 1998; in December of 2000, HBO released a film version of Disappearing Acts. Terry McMillan is the recipient of the 2002 Essence Award for Excellence in Literature. Her forthcoming novel is titled The Interruption of Everything. She lives in Northern California with her family.

Author biography courtesy of Penguin Group (USA).

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Editorials

Publishers Weekly - Publisher's Weekly

This hefty collection of short stories and excerpts from novels by what McMillan ( Disappearing Acts ) terms ``a new generation of African-American writers'' answers an anthology's highest call: it tantalizes. However briefly, each voice here sparkles. Amiri Baraka's ``Mondongo,'' a tale of a bookish Air Force doctor out for a night on the town in a Puerto Rican village, is a tour de force--making brilliant use of an oppressive, sad, but witty military vernacular. Nathaniel Mackey's ``Djbot Baghostus' Run,'' wherein members of a jazz band all dream the same dream and recite parts of it to each other, is a foot-tapping linguistic jam session. Misthis is correct/pk Hazel, the protagonist in Toni Cade Bambara's story ``My Man Bovanne,'' is an older but by no means wiser woman--``the hussy my daughter always say I was''--whose delight in sex and gossip sends her private rantings into the realm of pure rhythm. These tales mix politics and pleasure in the best of ways, using good storytelling to transmit their messages. Colleen McElroy (``Sister Detroit''), for example, views one Detroit woman's obsession with her husband's automobile as a metaphor for the effects of racism and the Vietnam War. One quibble: the volume would have benefited from a clear distinction between the short stories and the excerpts. QPB selection. (Oct.)

Book Details

Published
August 1, 1990
Publisher
New York, N.Y., U.S.A. : Viking, 1990.
Pages
560
Format
Hardcover
ISBN
9780670825622

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