Opal Palmer Adisa Reihenfolge der Bücher
Opal Palmer Adisas Schaffen ist tief in der reichen jamaikanischen Sprache und Kultur verwurzelt. Sie durchtränkt ihre Poesie und Prosa mit der "Nation Language", einer Wahl, die es ihr ermöglicht, Gefühle mit beispielloser Intimität und Lebendigkeit auszudrücken. Durch ihre Arbeit feiert sie nicht nur karibische Empfindungen, sondern fordert die Leser auch auf, sich tiefer mit der Sprache auseinanderzusetzen und ihre subtilen Schichten und lebendigen Texturen zu entdecken.



- 2023
- 2023
The story explores Precious's emotional journey as she navigates the contrasting worlds of her cherished life in Jamaica with her grandmother and her desire to reunite with her mother in the United States. This internal conflict highlights themes of family, belonging, and the challenges of adapting to new environments. Precious's longing for connection drives the narrative, making her experiences relatable and poignant as she grapples with the complexities of love and identity.
- 2022
The Storyteller's Return: Story Poems
- 120 Seiten
- 5 Lesestunden
"Opal Palmer Adisa has perfected a woman's grammar, and language rooted in the landscape of Jamaica, a landscape that she apprehends as compelling as a woman's body: complex, vibrant, dangerous and beautiful-and her poems emerge with a thick, sensual intensity. In these poems, Adisa brings her sharp eye and rich language to bear on her return to the Jamaica of beauty, sexual and physical violence, loss, and memory-a place where "no one feels safe", and yet a place where the arias of "maaanin-maanin" are restorative. Adisa summons the spirit of women to guide her through memory and the stories in poems that are vulnerable, fierce and revealing. Opal Palmer Adisa has been writing successfully for years, and yet in The Storyteller's Return, one has the sense of a first and complete voice, a way of seeing that is urgent and powerful. Adisa's grandmother tells her, "fi always have a good home/ dash you pee across you doorway". In the woman's grammar, transgression is liberation. This is an affirming and necessary meditation on the contradictory meaning of home by a gifted poet and storyteller. "Home," writes the storyteller, "will always remain unfinished". Kwame Dawes, author of The Mountain and the Sea.