Nin Andrews grew up on a farm in Charlottesville, Virginia. She received her BA from Hamilton College and her MFA from Vermont College. Her poems and stories have appeared in many literary journals and anthologies including Agni, Ploughshares, and Best American Poetry. The recipient of two Ohio Arts Council grants, she is the author of many books including The Book of Orgasms, Southern Comfort, and Why God Is a Woman.
"In intimate, braided lyrics, one of America's premier prose poets
delves beneath the surface of a southern childhood in the late 50's
and early 1960's with its sweet tea, manicured lawns, and
thoroughbred horses to release "a dark scream" of racism and class
division. The child-speakers of Miss August grope through strange
yet achingly familiar landscapes, coming to grips with gray ghosts
and unparsed truths, terrible forgetting and toxic remembering
which comprise the tragic legacy of "The War of Northern
Aggression." With incisive wit and deep compassion, Nin Andrews
demonstrates once again that "the past is never dead, it's not even
past." Now more than ever, Miss August is a book we need."--Philip
Brady (1/1/2017 12:00:00 AM)
"In Miss August, Nin Andrews reminds us that poets tell the
terrible stories, the ones we'd much rather ignore or sweep under
the rug. Nin doesn't shy away from past. In this extraordinary book
of prose poems, she is at her best, opening the door to childhood
to examine life in the desegregated South in the late '50's. Her
poems--about race, class, childhood, place--are complicated, never
simple, but always engaging, always coming from a place of love. As
Nin says, "racism is like arsenic--you can become de-sensitized to
it when you've sipped it over time." Here there is black, white,
and every shade of gray in between. Here Nin shines a light on a
difficult time our collective history."--January Gill O'Neil
(1/1/2017 12:00:00 AM)
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