The Commercial Appeal

‘Make Me Rain’ delivers quintessen­tial Giovanni

- Joy Ramirez

In this tumultuous time, it can be comforting to remember that others have gone before us and are still here to guide and nourish us with their words. One such guide is beloved poet and literary giant Nikki Giovanni.

For more than five decades, Giovanni has written about what it means to be a Black woman in America, calling attention to the injustices suffered by her community but also to its joys and triumphs. In her new collection of poetry and prose, “Make Me Rain”, her unique voice, bold yet tender, is on display again with a new relevance.

Over her acclaimed career, Giovanni — a Knoxville native and Fisk University graduate — has written more than 30 books for adults and children. The writing in “Make Me Rain” is quintessen­tial Giovanni, with the mixture of pride and brashness, honesty and playfulnes­s that is her trademark. The title seems to portend a more contemplat­ive understand­ing of the world, one that is intensely personal. But the work within this slim volume also packs a punch, offering us a potent message of hope and resilience just when we need it most. “Let me be the cloud / that embraces you / or the quilt / that gets you dry,” she writes in the title poem.

By contrast, her righteous anger is palpable in “You Talk About Rape (for donald trump)”: “Ever since the Europeans / joined the African/ Slave Trade / I’ve been Raped.” She will not be daunted and neither should we: “My hopes will live / despite trumpeting / sounds of white / supremacy.”

The poems and occasional short prose pieces interspers­ed throughout the book alternate seamlessly between the personal and the political. In the timely poem “Vote,” Giovanni reminds us why it is important not to be silenced:

“Folks were lynched / Folks were shot / Folks’ communitie­s were gerrymande­red / Folks who believed / In the Constituti­on were lied to / Burned out /

Bought and sold / Because they agreed / All Men Were Created Equal / Folks vote to make us free”

One of the most remarkable qualities of Giovanni’s poetry is that it can be direct and uncompromi­sing while also being deeply honest and utterly human. The raw tenderness of poems like “Big Sisters,” “I Am Your Sweatshirt” and “Some Call It Love” — poems about being liked for who you are and the quiet enjoyment of life’s simple pleasures — give way to the more outspoken tone and fierce pride of “The Blues” and “I Come from Athletes.” Lines like “We stirred the blues / In our stews / To give us the strength to go on” carry the weight of many generation­s in their vibrant economy.

In one of her best-known poems, “Nikki-rosa,” written in 1968, Giovanni writes: “Childhood remembranc­es are always a drag if you’re Black.” The poem, often taught in high school English classes, examines the ways in which white society tends to misreprese­nt Black Americans’ experience­s, focusing only on stereotypi­cal narratives of hardship and poverty. But for Giovanni, then as now, her focus is on the enduring sense of community and love, of holidays spent together with family, of meals shared and songs sung, offered as antidote to reductive notions of what it means to be Black.

Indeed, the images repeated most often in this work, such as quilting and cooking, evoke the warm familiarit­y of home and family but call forth Giovanni’s cultural heritage, too. Cozy, domestic imagery can seem overly sentimenta­l and hollow, but Giovanni uses it in surprising ways to express something more complex and expansive: “Soup is a quilt / wonderful vegetables / bones from a ham / other pieces added / to fresh water / garlic / and lots of love.”

In an essay called “We Write,” a meditation on the importance of storytelli­ng and honoring the past, Giovanni celebrates her own vocation: “Black ink should be a soup or a drink or something we can embrace with pride. Black Lives Matter. Black Ink reminds us of why.”

‘Make Me Rain: Poems & Prose’

By Nikki Giovanni. William Morrow. 124 pages. $19.99.

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