OUT OF PRINT

 

Houston A. Baker, Jr.,

       Blues Journeys Home

       No Matter Where You Travel, You Still Be Black

Beth Brown,  Lightyears

Kiarri T-H. Cheatwood,

       Bloodstorm: Five Books ofPoems Towards Liberation

       Elegyfor Patrice

Robert Chrisman,  Minor Casualties

Louis Crew,   Sunspots

Selene deMedeiros,   This Is How I Love You

Tom Dent,   Blue Lights and River Songs

Toi Derricotte,  The Empress ofthe Death House

Abba Elethea (James W. Thompson),  The Antioch Suite-Jazz

James A. Emanuel,  Black Man Abroad: The Toulouse Poems

Ronald Fair,  Rufus

Naomi F. Faust,

      All Beautiful Things

      And I Travel by Rhythms and Words

Ray Fleming,  Diplomatic Relations

Eugene Haun,   Cardinal Points and Other Poems

Lance Jeffers,  

      Grandsire

      O Africa, Where I Baked My Bread

Kamaldeen Ibraheem,  Roots, Flowers and Fruits

Agnes Nasmith Johnston,   Beyond the Moongate

Gayl Jones,

      The Hermit-Woman

      Songfor Anninho

      Xarque

Dolores Kendrick,  Now Is the Thing to Praise

James C. Kilgore,   African Violet: Poem for a Black Woman

Oliver LaGrone,   Dawnfire and Other Poems

Pinkie Gordon Lane,   I Never Scream

Naomi Long Madgett,   Phantom Nightingale: Juvenilia

Haki R. Madhubuti,   Killing Memory, Seeking Ancestors

Herbert Woodward Martin,

      The Forms ofSilence

      The Persisence ofthe Flesh

Irma McClaurin,   Pearl's Song

E. Ethelbert Miller,

     Season ofHunger/Cry ofRain

May Miller,

     Dust ofUncertain Journey

     HalfWay to the Sun

     The Ransomed Wait

Gunilla Norris,   Learningfrom the Angel

Tanure Ojaide,   The Eagle's Vision

Mwatabu Okantah,   Collage

Isetta Crawford Rawls,   Flashbacks

Sarah Carolyn Reese,   Songs of Freedom

David L. Rice,   Lock This Man Up

Philip M. Royster,   Songs and Dances

Satiafa (Vivian Verdell Gordon),   For Dark Woman and Others

Helen Earle Simcox, ed.,   Dear Dark Faces: Portraits of a People

Gary Smith,   Songs for My Fathers

Ron Welbum,   Heartland

Paulette Childress White,   Love Poem for a Black Junkie

Willie Williams,   A Flower Blooming in Concrete