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Other titles by Maya Angelou:

I Shall Not Be Moved

Maya Angelou: Poems

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Maya Angelou photo Maya Angelou:
Reader's Group Companion


I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

Bantam trade paperback, ISBN 0-553-38001-X, $12.00 US, $15.95 CAN

Bantam paperback, ISBN 0-553-27937-8, $5.50 US, $6.99 CAN

Gather Together in My Name

Bantam trade paperback, ISBN 0-553-37997-6, $12.00 US, $15.95 CAN

Bantam paperback, ISBN 0-553-26066-9, $5.50 US, $6.99 CAN

Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas

Bantam trade paperback, ISBN 0-553-38005-2, $12.00 US, $15.95 CAN

Bantam paperback, ISBN 0-553-25199-6, $5.50 US, $6.99 CAN

The Heart of a Woman

Bantam trade paperback, ISBN 0-553-38009-5, $12.00 US, $15.95 CAN

Bantam paperback, ISBN 0-553-24689-5, $5.50 US, $6.99 CAN

Wouldn't Take Nothing For My Journey Now

Bantam trade paperback, ISBN 0-553-38017-6, $10.00 US, $13.95 CAN

Bantam paperback, ISBN 0-553-56907-4, $5.50 US, $6.99 CAN

Maya Angelou Readers' Group Companion © 1998 Bantam Books.


Contents:

1. Introduction
2. Questions for Discussion
3. About Maya Angelou

 
Introduction

"Maya Angelou confronts her own life with such a moving wonder, such a luminous dignity. I have no words for this achievement, but I know that not since the days of my childhood, when the people in books were more real than the people one saw every day, have I found myself so moved."
--James Baldwin

"An unabashed celebrant of the human spirit."
--Ebony

"Her writing is as gentle as a mist, and as powerful as daybreak."
--Chicago Sun-Times

"Maya Angelou writes like a song, and like the truth."
--The New York Times Book Review


Memoirist, novelist, poet, and dramatist, Maya Angelou is one of the best-loved writers of our time. She is widely acclaimed for her searing, inspiring writings--and she has been praised for confronting both the racial and sexual pressures on black women, and for infusing her work with a perspective on larger social and political movements, including civil rights.

In the volumes of her bestselling personal story--one of the most remarkable narratives ever shared--Maya Angelou writes about the struggles and triumphs of her extraordinary life with
candor, humor, poignancy, and grace. These include:

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings
The classic autobiography of her young years.

Gather Together In My Name
The coming-of-age story of her struggle for survival as a young unwed mother.

Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas
The saga of her show business career, her failed marriage, and her early motherhood.

The Heart of a Woman
The turbulent story of her emergence as a writer and a political activist.

Wouldn't Take Nothing For My Journey Now
Her exhilarating collection of wisdom, spirituality, and life lessons.

 
Questions For Discussion

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

1. The memoir opens with a provocative refrain: "What you looking at me for? I didn't come to stay ... "

What do you think this passage says about Ritie's sense of herself? How does she feel about her place in the world? How does she keep her identity intact?

2. Upon seeing her mother for the first time after years of separation, Ritie describes her as "a hurricane in its perfect power." What do you think about Ritie's relationship with her mother? How does it compare to her relationship with her grandmother, "Momma"?

3. The author writes, "If growing up is painful for the Southern Black girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat." What do you make of the author's portrayal of race? How do Ritie and her family cope with the racial tension that permeates their lives?

4. Throughout the book, Ritie struggles with feelings that she is "bad" and "sinful," as her thoughts echo the admonitions of her strict religious upbringing. What does she learn at the end of the memoir about right and wrong?

5. What is the significance of the title as it relates to Ritie's self-imposed muteness?


Gather Together in My Name

1. Rita's nonconformity is both a blessing and a curse. How do you think it hurts her--and helps her?

2. What does Rita learn about the stability of human relationships? Does she tend to trust others, or is she suspicious?

3. When Rita is thrown into the adult world, her innocence dies. When and how is her innocence reborn?

4. Rita has a series of unsuccessful relationships with men. She supposes that men leave her because they don't think she needs them badly enough. What about her might make men think this? Do you believe that she truly wanted the relationships; why or why not?


Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas

1. If I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings is about self-discovery, and Gather Together in My Name is about self-reliance, what theme would you derive from Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas?

2. What is the significance of the author discarding the nicknames "Ritie", "Sugar", and "Rita"?

3. On her travels around the world and throughout the book, what does Maya learn about prejudice and tolerance?

4. How would you characterize Guy? In what ways are he and his mother alike? How do they differ?


The Heart of a Woman

1. What is the significance of Maya quitting show business to become a civil rights activist?

2. Maya's husband Make is a freedom fighter--yet he treats Maya as a possession. Why do you think Maya stays with him? Do you think Make sees his own hypocrisy, and why or why not?

3. When approached by a friendly stranger, Maya's mother remarks, "He's colored and I'm colored, but we are not cousins." What episodes in the memoir might evoke the same response from Maya?

4. The memoir concludes with a poignant scene, as Guy bids farewell to Maya before he goes to college. Guy is characteristically wise, brave, and mature for his years. What do his parting words say about his perceived role in their relationship? How has Maya's role changed?

 
About Maya Angelou:

On April 4, 1928, Maya Angelou was born Marguerita Johnson in St. Louis, Missouri. Her parents soon divorced and she was sent to live with her grandmother in rural Arkansas, where she spent most of her early childhood. During a visit to St. Louis when she was eight years old, Angelou was raped by her mother's boyfriend, whom her uncles subsequently killed. Angelou did not speak for some years after.

In 1940, Angelou moved to San Francisco with her mother. While attending high school, she became pregnant and gave birth to a son in 1945, just after receiving her diploma. To support her child and herself, she worked several odd jobs. While appearing as a dancer in a cabaret, she changed her name to Angelou. Her experience there led to an acting and singing career and she joined a cast performing "Porgy and Bess" throughout Europe.

When she was thirty, Angelou moved to New York and joined the Harlem Writers Guild, where she met James Baldwin. She became involved in the civil rights movement, serving as the northern coordinator for Martin Luther King, Jr.'s Southern Christian Leadership Conference from 1959 to 1960. She later moved to Egypt, where she edited an English-language newspaper, and then to Ghana, working as a writer and editor.

In 1970, Angelou published I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. An account of her childhood up to the birth of her son, it is her most critically-acclaimed work and was nominated for a National Book Award. She went on to write Gather Together in My Name, Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas, The Heart of a Woman, and Wouldn't Take Nothing for My Journey Now. Her acclaimed works of poetry include Maya Angelou: Poems and I Shall Not Be Moved.

In film and television, Angelou wrote the original screenplay and musical score for the film "Georgia, Georgia," and wrote and produced a ten-part television series on African traditions in American life, and participated as guest interviewer for the Public Broadcasting System program "Assignment America." One of the few women members of the Directors Guild, she is the author of the television screenplays I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and The Sisters.

In January 1993, Maya Angelou became the first woman and the first African-American to read her work at a presidential inauguration. Her inaugural poem "On the Pulse of the Morning" celebrates the diversity of the American and world communities and calls on them to work together to create a better future. She currently lives in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where she is Reynolds Professor at Wake Forest University.