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About
the Title
About the Author
Discussion Questions
INTRODUCTION
Black Girl In Paris
Shay Youngbloods
debut novel, Soul Kiss, received accolades from reviewers and writers
alike. The Washington Post hailed it as "intelligent and erotic
immensely
engrossing and satisfying, " while The Atlanta Journal-Constitution
called it "exquisite." Tina McElroy Ansa described it as "extraordinary
lyrical,
intimate, funny, unsettling, enthralling." Now, in her second novel,
Youngblood explores the endeavor of a creative coming-of-age, and infuses
her story with the same mesmerizing, lush language and impressionistic
style that won her so many fans the first time around.
Black
Girl in Paris wends its way around the mythology of Paris as a city that
called out to African-American artists. Like James Baldwin, Langston Hughes,
and Josephine Baker before her, Youngbloods heroine leaves the American
South nurturing a dream of finding artistic emancipation in the City of
Light. She experiments freely, inhabiting different incarnationsartists
model, poets helper, au pair, teacher, thief, and loverto
keep body and soul together, to stay afloat,
heal the wounds of her broken heart, discover her sexual self, and, finally,
to wrestle her dreams of becoming a writer into reality.
Youngbloods
lyricism, as effortless as an inspired improvisation, and her respect
for the tradition she depicts create a natural tension between old and
new, reverence and innovation, and tell a story that feels at once timeless
and immediate.
ABOUT
SHAY YOUNGBLOOD
Shay Youngblood
is a playwright and the author of The Big Mama Stories, a collection,
and Soul Kiss, a novel. The winner of a Pushcart Prize and a nominee for
QPBs New Voices award, she lives in New York City.
DISCUSSION
QUESTIONS
- Paris
of the 1920s-50s saw a substantial number of American artistsmany
of them outsiders, many of them African-American or gaywho fled
prejudice and persecution for a more tolerant home. How is the Paris
of the 1980s different than the one James Baldwin knew? Does Youngbloods
depiction of Paris still seem like an ideal city for artists? For African-Americans?
Why or why not?
- Eden
begins her story by saying shes "not afraid of anything anymore."
Do you think this is true? Do you find Eden brave, or naïve, or
both? Can you cite examples from the text where Eden seems particularly
courageous, and when she seems vulnerable?
- Theres
much food imagery in Youngbloods novel, and Eden often compares
herself and others to different foods. How might Youngblood be using
food as a metaphor for Edens own uncertainty? What might this
imagery say about Edens relationships with the people she meets
and interacts with in Paris? What is Youngblood saying about how Eden
sees other people, and how they see her?
- Youngbloods
Paris is peopled with artists and dreamers whove escaped constrictive
environments (or obligations) for the romance of the city. Indeed, Eden
leaves for Paris to both follow her dreams and to escape her small hometown.
What other sorts of escapes does Eden make throughout her journey? What
might the other people Eden meetsIndego, Ving, Professor May Day,
and Charlotte, for examplebe escaping? What do you think they
hope to find in Paris?
- Its
a truism that a good artistbe they writer, musician, or painterneeds
to expose herself to different cultures, places, and people in order
to grow artistically. Indeed, Eden travels to Paris as much to gain
experience as find her literary forebears. Do you agree that artists
need to take risksbe they physical or emotionalwhich make
them uncomfortable in order to develop? Why or why not?
- The
city of Paris is as much a character in this book as Eden herself. How
does Edens own conflicted relationship with Paris echo that of
a love affair? Do you think Eden will return to the United States? Why
or why not? Compare Edens feelings towards Paris at the beginning
of the book versus the end: how have her feelings changed?
- How
has Eden changed by the end of the book? Do you think the ending is
a hopeful ending, or do you think Eden has become disenchanted?
- Black
Girl in Paris is a highly sensuous bookwhat techniques has Youngblood
borrowed from other artistic mediums (music, say, or art) to evoke a
dreamy picture of Paris, and Edens own adventures?
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