Girl in the mirror : three generations of Black women in motion / Natasha Tarpley.
Record details
- ISBN: 0807072028 (cloth) :
- Physical Description: 181 p. ; 23 cm.
- Publisher: Boston : Beacon Press, c1998.
Search for related items by subject
Subject: | African American women > Fiction. African American families > Fiction. African Americans > Migrations > Fiction. |
Genre: | Autobiographical fiction. Domestic fiction. |
Available copies
- 1 of 1 copy available at GRPL.

Publishers Weekly Review
Girl in the Mirror : Three Generations of Black Women in Motion
Publishers Weekly
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
In this lyrical and strongly imaginative memoir, Tarpley (Testimony) calls on the voices of her familyÃespecially her mother, Marlene, and her grandmother, AnnaÃin "a search not only for who I am to become, but also for who I have been." In the first person, she recounts Anna's marriage to Jack, the gulf of loneliness she experiences when he leaves their home in Alabama for Chicago and Anna's own journey to be with him there in 1942. In Marlene's voice, Tarpley explores childhood, marriage to an alcoholic and a plane flight to Anna's deathbed. Finally, Tarpley claims her own voice, speaking of her girlhood, her trip to Africa to find grounding and her rich relationships with her mother and her grandmother. The author's skill at capturing these women's distinct voices is impressive, even if her own memories are less compellingly told. The legacy of love and abandonment, and the force of spirit that these family members share, shines abundantly and gorgeously through Tarpley's accomplished writing. Her narrative skill makes this short, experimental memoir a moving, thought-provoking meditation on the African American family and the genealogy of self. (June) (c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved

BookList Review
Girl in the Mirror : Three Generations of Black Women in Motion
Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Natasha Tarpley has written a family memoir that has the rhythm of a novel. Tarpley's three generations of women set out to make the future more secure for themselves and their families. Anna, the grandmother, makes the decision to migrate from Alabama to Chicago in search of a better life. Anna's daughter, Marlene, decides to relocate after her husband's death in hopes of starting anew. Anna's granddaughter, Natasha, takes a trip to Africa in search of her ancestry. Each woman makes a decision that impacts her future, and each discovers that the past helps her move forward. Tarpley excels at weaving the struggles and triumphs of her mother and grandmother into her own story of success. Great library book! --Lillian Lewis