Each month, we highlight birthdays of authors for you to discover through print and digital items as well as online biographies. In the post below, click on the author’s name to find titles by them in our catalog. Read a bit about each author, and find their full biography in the database listed! Find the database at www.tulsalibrary.org/databases, then log in with your last name and TCCL card number.
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Ann Petry (born Oct. 12, 1908): "Ann Petry authored several novels, short stories, and juvenile fiction. By debunking stereotypes of race, class, and gender, Petry contributed significantly to the nonsentimental depiction of the socio-economic plight of African Americans in the 1940s and 1950s and thereby paved the way for contemporary African American women's writing." From her bio in the African American Experience online resource, accessible HERE.
Roxane Gay (born Oct. 15, 1974): "Roxane Gay is an African American queer writer, commentator, and university professor. Her multigenre works include essays, opinion pieces, short stories, a novel, a memoir, and a Marvel Comics series. One of her most celebrated works in Bad Feminist (2014), a collection of essays on how feminism has influenced her life. The many subjects of Gay's writings include racism, feminism, LGBTQ issues, personal identity, body image, social misfits, complicated relationships, sexual violence, pop culture, and politics. Her prose has been described as 'simple and direct.' Some of her writings are in the style of imaginative fables and fairy tales. Among Gay's many honors is the 2018 Guggenheim Fellowship for General Nonfiction." From her bio in the African American Experience online resource, accessible HERE.
Ntozake Shange (born Oct. 18, 1948): "Playwright, poet, and novelist, Ntozake Shange combines cultural feminism with Pan-Africanism in her distinctive contribution to African American arts. Her enormously popular choreopoem, for colored girls who have considered suicide/when the rainbow is enuf (1975), combines poetry, drama, and movement, and made Shange one of the preeminent African American poets." From her bio in the African American Experience online resource, accessible HERE.
Terry McMillan (born Oct. 18, 1951): "Terry McMillan is an American novelist and screenwriter whose works take the form of roman à clefs (a mixture of nonfiction and fiction) and center around the lives of African American women, often fusing tragedy and humor. The most famous examples are Disappearing Acts, Waiting to Exhale, and How Stella Got Her Groove Back." From her bio in the African American Experience online resource, accessible HERE.