A Song Flung Up to Heaven

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Overview

The culmination of a unique achievement in modern American literature: the six volumes of autobiography that began more than thirty years ago with the appearance of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

A Song Flung Up to Heaven opens as Maya Angelou returns from Africa to the United States to work with Malcolm X. But first she has to journey to California to be reunited with her mother and brother. No sooner does she arrive there than she learns ...

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Overview

The culmination of a unique achievement in modern American literature: the six volumes of autobiography that began more than thirty years ago with the appearance of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings.

A Song Flung Up to Heaven opens as Maya Angelou returns from Africa to the United States to work with Malcolm X. But first she has to journey to California to be reunited with her mother and brother. No sooner does she arrive there than she learns that Malcolm X has been assassinated.

Devastated, she tries to put her life back together, working on the stage in local theaters and even conducting a door-to-door survey in Watts. Then Watts explodes in violence, a riot she describes firsthand.

Subsequently, on a trip to New York, she meets Martin Luther King, Jr., who asks her to become his coordinator in the North, and she visits black churches all over America to help support King’s Poor People’s March.

But once again tragedy strikes. King is assassinated, and this time Angelou completely withdraws from the world, unable to deal with this horrible event. Finally, James Baldwin forces her out of isolation and insists that she accompany him to a dinner party—where the idea for writing I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings is born. In fact, A Song Flung Up to Heavenends as Maya Angelou begins to write the first sentences of Caged Bird.

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Editorial Reviews

From Barnes & Noble
The Barnes & Noble Review
Acclaimed memoirist Maya Angelou, who began her autobiographical series with the classic 1969 I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, comes full circle with this tale of her return from Africa to the United States in 1964 to work with Malcolm X.

Poignantly, the book ends with Angelou writing the first line of I Know Why, as she decides it's time to chronicle her life: "I thought if I wrote a book, I would have to examine the quality in the human spirit that continues to rise despite the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune…Rise and be prepared to move on and ever on."

Indeed, there are many wounds inflicted on Angelou in these pages. After flying from Ghana, she journeys to California to reunite with her mother and brother. On arrival, she learns that Malcolm has been murdered. Her despair is furthered by her realization that the reaction to the killing among San Francisco blacks is matter-of-fact.

After a stint as a nightclub singer, Angelou moves to the Watts section of Los Angeles to do market research on black women. She discovers that many of the Watts women are unhappy with their lives: Their husbands are not working, there are children to take care of, and they are increasingly forced to do more with less. Angelou misses nothing with her keen writer's eye: "Without work and steady salaries, the people could not envision tomorrows." Her observations prove to be prophetic, as the 1965 Watts riots break out. Once again, she is witness to the difficulties of African-American life in the mid-20th century.

But there is yet one more tragedy in store for her. In 1968, the Reverend Martin Luther King Jr. asks her to "travel the country and talk to black preachers" about his message of nonviolent protest. Before she can make the trip, King -- like Malcolm -- is silenced by an assassin's bullet.

It's most fortunate that Angelou has been able to turn her experiences, many of them difficult, into a series of classic memoirs. (Nicholas Sinisi)

Nicholas Sinisi is the Barnes & Noble.com Biography editor.

From the Publisher
Praise for I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings

“I know that not since the days of my childhood, when people in books were more real than the people one saw every day,
have I found myself so moved.”
—James Baldwin

Gather Together in My Name

“Gather Together in My Name is part of a select body of literature that includes The Autobiography of Malcolm X, Claude Brown’s
Manchild in the Promised Land and Ernest J. Gaines’
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman. Maya Angelou regards the world and herself with intelligence and wit; she records the events of her life with style and grace.”
—William McPherson, The Washington Post Book World

All God’s Children Need Traveling Shoes

“This is a superb account by a great woman who has embraced a difficult destiny with rare intelligence and infectious joie de vivre.”
— The Boston Globe

From The Critics
The sixth volume of Angelou's autobiography recounts the assassinations of Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr., leaders for whom the renowned poet and writer had separately pledged to work just weeks before they were murdered in 1965 and 1968, respectively. Both deaths make her quest for purpose as an African-American woman in the anxious 1960s ever more urgent. Using spare, straightforward prose, Angelou recalls her days as the single mother of a difficult teenage son and as a singer who evolves into a storyteller. Some of this material is recycled, most notably the childhood story that constitutes the core of I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, and some feels more like filler than compelling or essential narrative. But when Angelou bears firsthand witness to the Watts riots, when she offers vignettes of famous friends and when she speaks with heart about the plight of race relations, the story is engaging and informative.
—Beth Kephart
Library Journal
How Angelou came to write her momentous I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings after being stunned by the assassinations of Malcolm X Copyright 2001 Cahners Business Information.
School Library Journal
Adult/High School-Far from a textbook account, this final volume in the writer's series of six memoirs takes readers into the heart of the civil rights movement. Angelou begins in 1964. When she replanted her feet in America to help Malcolm X, she admittedly left a piece of her heart in Ghana with her son. She was also developing artistically during this time, and finding the means by which to express herself to her country and in her community. Any YA who has aimed to accomplish something meaningful and met with personal loss or the disappointment of bad timing, will identify with her. Before she was able to help Malcolm X form the Organization of African-American Unity, he was assassinated. Her mother and protective brother buttressed her spirits, and encouraged her to move forward. From San Francisco to Hawaii and back to California she takes readers into an economically depressed area in Los Angeles before, during, and after it burned. Her next giant step will be appreciated by YAs with an artistic side. She describes performing and writing plays for an African-American theater. Later, after she moved to New York, her pal James Baldwin and others instrumental in changing the view of America in the 1960s are featured prominently. History was in the making and Angelou was in the midst of it as this worthwhile autobiography attests.-Karen Sokol, Fairfax County Public Schools, VA Copyright 2002 Cahners Business Information.
Kirkus Reviews
The distinguished poet and playwright brings her six-volume cycle of memoirs to a close. Angelou (Even the Stars Look Lonesome) is today among the best-known African-American writers at work-a celebrity, even, thanks to appearances at Bill Clinton's first inauguration, on Sesame Street, and in various Oprah Winfrey productions. But at the beginning of this slender memoir, written with trademark irony and gentle indignation ("Black females, for the most part, know by the time they are ten years old that the world is not much concerned with the quality of their lives or even their lives at all"), she has yet to attain all that. Instead, in the year 1964, we find Angelou in her late 30s, preparing after four years to leave Ghana and the smooth-talking African who's been courting her. She's going home to take on a job as a writer and organizer for Malcolm X. That comes to an end with Malcolm's assassination, which shakes Angelou to the core: "If a group of racists had waylaid Malcolm, killed him in the dark," she writes, "I might have accepted his death more easily. But he was killed by black people as he spoke to black people about a better future for black people and in the presence of his family." Moving back and forth from New York to Los Angeles with stops in between, Angelou spends the '60s in the company of such leaders and writers as Martin Luther King Jr. and James Baldwin, both of whom she portrays respectfully and affectionately. Along the way, she discovers her voice as a writer. In a nice structural turn, her autobiographical cycle ends where it began, with the first sentence of the now-classic I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings. Alternately elegiac, meditative, and humorous, a book to savor and remember.
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Product Details

  • ISBN-13: 9780553382037
  • Publisher: Random House Publishing Group
  • Publication date: 4/1/2003
  • Edition description: Reprint
  • Pages: 224
  • Sales rank: 113037
  • Product dimensions: 5.65 (w) x 8.26 (h) x 0.57 (d)

Meet the Author

Maya Angelou

Maya Angelou was raised in Stamps, Arkansas. In addition to her bestselling autobiographies, including I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and The Heart of a Woman, she wrote numerous volumes of poetry, among them Phenomenal Woman, And Still I Rise, On the Pulse of Morning, and Mother. Maya Angelou died in 2014.

Biography

As a chronicler of her own story and the larger civil rights movement in which she took part, Maya Angelou is remarkable in equal measure for her lyrical gifts as well as her distinct sense of justice, both politically and personally.

Angelou was among the first, if not the first, to create a literary franchise based on autobiographical writings. In the series' six titles -- beginning with the classic I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings and followed by Gather Together in My Name, Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry Like Christmas, Heart of a Woman, All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes, and 2002's A Song Flung Up to Heaven -- Angelou tells her story in language both no-nonsense and intensely spiritual.

Angelou's facility with language, both on paper and as a suede-voiced speaker, have made her a populist poet. Her 1995 poem "Phenomenal Woman" is still passed along the Web among women as inspiration ("It's in the reach of my arms/The span of my hips/The stride of my steps/The curl of my lips./I'm a woman/Phenomenally/Phenomenal woman/That's me"), and her 1993 poem "On the Pulse of the Morning," written for Bill Clinton's presidential inauguration, was later released as a Grammy-winning album.

Angelou often cites other writers (from Kenzaburo Oe to James Baldwin) both in text and name. But as often as not, her major mentors were not writers – she had been set to work with Malcolm X and Martin Luther King Jr. before each was assassinated, stories she recounts in A Song Flung Up to Heaven.

Given her rollercoaster existence -- from poverty in Arkansas to journalism in Egypt and Ghana and ultimately, to her destiny as a successful writer and professor in the States – it's no surprise that Angelou hasn't limited herself to one or two genres. Angelou has also written for stage and screen, acted, and directed. She is the rare author from whom inspiration can be derived both from her approach to life as from her talent in writing about it. Reading her books is like taking counsel from your wisest, favorite aunt.

Good To Know

Angelou was nominated for an Emmy for her performance as Nyo Boto in the 1977 miniseries Roots. She has also appeared in films such as How to Make an American Quilt and Poetic Justice, and she directed 1998's Down in the Delta.

Angelou speaks six languages, including West African Fanti.

She taught modern dance at the Rome Opera House and the Hambina Theatre in Tel Aviv.

Before she became famous as a writer, Maya Angelou was a singer. Miss Calypso is a CD of her singing calypso songs.

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    1. Also Known As:
      Margeurite Johnson
      Maya Angelou
    2. Hometown:
      Winston-Salem, North Carolina
    1. Date of Birth:
      Wed Apr 04 00:00:00 EST 1928
    2. Place of Birth:
      St. Louis, Missouri
    1. Education:
      High school in Atlanta and San Francisco

Read an Excerpt

One

The old ark's a-movering a-movering a-movering the old ark's a-movering and I'm going home.
Nineteenth-century American spiritual

The old ark was a Pan Am jet and I was returning to the United States. The airplane had originated in Johannesburg and stopped in Accra, Ghana, to pick up passengers.

I boarded, wearing traditional West African dress, and sensed myself immediately, and for the first time in years, out of place. A presentiment of unease enveloped me before I could find my seat at the rear of the plane. For the first few minutes I busied myself arranging bags, souvenirs, presents. When I finally settled into my narrow seat, I looked around and became at once aware of the source of my discomfort. I was among more white people than I had seen in four years. During that period I had not once thought of not seeing white people; there were European, Canadian and white American faculty at the university where I worked. Roger and Jean Genoud, who were Swiss United Nations personnel, had become my close friends and in fact helped me to raise—or better, corral—my teenage son. So my upset did not come from seeing the white complexion, but rather, from seeing so much of it at one time.

For the next seven hours, I considered the life I was leaving and the circumstances to which I was returning. I thought of the difference between the faces I had just embraced in farewell and those on the plane who looked at me and other blacks who also boarded in Accra with distaste, if not outright disgust. I thought of my rambunctious nineteen-year-old son, whom I was leaving with a family of Ghanaian friends. I also left him under the watchful eye and, I hoped, tender care of God, who seemed to be the only force capable of controlling him.

My thoughts included the political climate I was leaving. It was a known fact that antigovernment forces were aligning themselves at that very moment to bring down the regime of Kwame Nkrumah, Ghana's controversial, much adored but also much hated president. The atmosphere was thick with accusations, threats, fear, guilt, greed and capriciousness. Yet at least all the visible participants in that crowded ambience were black, in contrast to the population in the environment to which I was returning. I knew that the air in the United States was no less turbulent than that in Ghana. If my mail and the world newspapers were to be believed, the country was clamoring with riots and pandemonium. The cry of "burn, baby, burn" was loud in the land, and black people had gone from the earlier mode of "sit-in" to "set fire," and from "march-in" to "break-in."

Malcolm X, on his last visit to Accra, had announced a desire to create a foundation he called the Organization of African-American Unity. His proposal included taking the plight of the African-Americans to the United Nations and asking the world council to intercede on the part of beleaguered blacks. The idea was so stimulating to the community of African-American residents that I persuaded myself I should return to the States to help establish the organization. Alice Windom and Vickie Garvin, Sylvia Boone and Julian Mayfield, African-Americans who lived and worked in Ghana, were also immediate supporters. When I informed them that I had started making plans to go back to America to work with Malcolm, they—my friends, buddies, pals—began to treat me as if I had suddenly become special. They didn't speak quite so loudly around me, they didn't clap my back when laughing; nor were they as quick to point out my flaws. My stature had definitely increased.

We all read Malcolm's last letter to me.

Dear Maya,
I was shocked and surprised when your letter arrived but I was also pleased because I only had to wait two months for this one whereas previously I had to wait almost a year. You see I haven't lost my wit. (smile)

Your analysis of our people's tendency to talk over the head of the masses in a language that is too far above and beyond them is certainly true. You can communicate because you have plenty of (soul) and you always keep your feet firmly rooted on the ground.

I am enclosing some articles that will give you somewhat of an idea of my daily experiences here and you will then be better able to understand why it sometimes takes me a long time to write. I was most pleased to learn that you might be hitting in this direction this year. You are a beautiful writer and a beautiful woman. You know that I will always do my utmost to be helpful to you in any way possible so don't hesitate.

Signed
Your brother Malcolm

I looked around the plane at the South African faces and thought of Vus Make, my latest husband, from whom I had separated. He and members of the Pan-African Congress and Oliver Tambo, second in command of the African National Congress, really believed they would be able to change the hearts and thereby the actions of the apartheid-loving Boers. In the early sixties I called them Nation Dreamers. When I thought of Robert Sobukwe, leader of the Pan-African Congress who had languished for years in prison, and Nelson Mandela, who had recently been arrested, I was sure that they would spend their lives sealed away from the world. I had thought that, despite their passion and the rightness of their cause, the two men would become footnotes on the pages of history.

Now, with the new developments about to take place, I felt a little sympathy for the Boers, and congratulated myself and all African-Americans for our courage. The passion my people would exhibit under Malcolm's leadership was going to help us rid our country of racism once and for all. The Africans in South Africa often said they had been inspired by Martin Luther King, Jr., and the Montgomery bus boycott of 1958. Well, we were going to give them something new, something visionary, to look up to. After we had cleansed ourselves and our country of hate, they would be able to study our methods, take heart from our example and let freedom ring in their country as it would ring in ours.

Sweet dreams of the future blunted the sharp pain of leaving both my son and the other important man in my life. Given enough time, Guy would eventually grow up and be a fine man, but my romantic other could never fit into my world, nor I into his.

He was a powerful West African who had swept into my life with the urgency of a Southern hurricane. He uprooted my well-planted ideas and blew down all my firmly held beliefs about decorum.

I had been in love many times before I met him, but I had never surrendered myself to anyone. I had given my word and my body, but I had never given my soul. The African had the habit of being obeyed, and he insisted on having all of me. The pleasure I found with him made me unable, or at least unwilling, to refuse.

Within a month of conceding my authority over myself and my life to another, I realized the enormity of my mistake. If I wanted chicken, he said he wanted lamb, and I quickly agreed. If I wanted rice, he wanted yams, and I quickly agreed. He said that I was to go along with whatever he wanted, and I agreed. If I wanted to visit with my friends and he wanted to be alone but not without me, I agreed.

I began to feel the pinch of his close embrace the first time I wanted to sit up and read and he wanted to go to bed.

And, he added, I was needed.

I agreed.

But I thought, "Needed?" Needed like an extra blanket? Like air-conditioning? Like more pepper in the soup? I resented being thought of as a thing, but I had to admit that I allowed the situation myself and had no reason to be displeased with anyone save myself.

Each time I gave up my chicken for his lamb, I ate less. When I gave up a visit with friends to stay home with him, I enjoyed him less. And when I joined him, leaving my book abandoned on the desk, I found I had less appetite for the bedroom.

"You Americans can be bullheaded, stupid and crazy. Why would you kill President Kennedy?" He didn't hear me say, "I didn't kill the president."

My return to the United States came at the most opportune time. I could leave my son to his manly development hurdles; I would leave my great, all-consuming love to his obedient subjects; and I would return to work with Malcolm X on building the Organization of African-American Unity.

By the time we arrived in New York, I had discarded my vilification of the white racists on the plane and had even begun to feel a little more sorry for them.

I was saddened by their infantile, puerile minds. They could be assured that as soon as we American blacks got our country straight, the Xhosas, Zulus, Matabeles, Shonas and others in southern Africa would lead their whites from the gloom of ignorance into the dazzling light of understanding.

The sound in the airport was startling. The open air in Africa was often loud, with many languages being spoken at once, children crying, drums pounding—that had been noise, but at New York's Idlewild Airport, the din that aggressively penetrated the air, insisting on being heard, was clamor. There were shouts and orders, screams, implorings and demands, horns blaring and voices booming. I found a place beside a wall and leaned against it. I had been away from the cacophony for four years, but now I was home.

After I gathered my senses, I found a telephone booth.

I knew I was not ready for New York's strenuous energy, but I needed to explain that to my New York friends. I had written Rosa Guy, my supportive sister-friend, and she was expecting me. I also needed to call Abbey Lincoln, the jazz singer, and her husband, Max Roach, the jazz drummer, who had offered me a room in their Columbus Avenue apartment that I had refused. But most especially, I had to speak to Malcolm.

His telephone voice caught me off guard. I realized I had never spoken to him on the telephone.

"Maya, so you finally got here. How was the trip?" His voice was higher-pitched than I expected.

"Fine."

"You stay at the airport, I'll be there to pick you up. I'll leave right now."

I interrupted. "I'm going straight to San Francisco. My plane leaves soon."

"I thought you were coming to work with us in New York."

"I'll be back in a month . . ." I explained that I needed to be with my mother and my brother, Bailey, just to get used to being back in the United States.

Malcolm said, "I had to leave my car in the Holland Tunnel. Somebody was trying to get me. I jumped in a white man's car. He panicked. I told him who I was, and he said, 'Get down low, I'll get you out of this.' You believe that, Maya?"

I said yes, but I found it hard to do so. "I'll call you next week when I get my bearings."

Malcolm said, "Well, let me tell you about Betty and the girls." I immediately remembered the long nights in Ghana when our group sat and listened to him talk about the struggle, racism, political strategies and social unrest. Then he would speak of Betty. His voice would soften and take on a new melody. We would be told of her great intelligence, of her beauty, of her wit. How funny she was and how faithful. We would hear that she was an adoring mother and a brave and loving wife.

Malcolm said, "She is here now and making a wonderful dinner. You know she is pretty and pregnant. Pretty pregnant." He laughed at his own joke.

I said, "Please give her my regards. I must run for my plane. I'll call you next week."

"Do that. Safe trip."

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Table of Contents

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Interviews & Essays

An Interview with Maya Angelou

Dr. Maya Angelou is widely regarded as one of the most inspiring authors of our time. Her multivolume autobiography, which began with I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969), followed by Gather Together in My Name (1974), Singin' and Swingin' and Gettin' Merry like Christmas (1976), The Heart of a Woman (1981), and All God's Children Need Traveling Shoes (1986), has taken readers from her girlhood home in Arkansas to Chicago, California, New York, Africa, and beyond. Through her writing, Dr. Angelou has revealed moments of personal crisis and political upheaval and commented eloquently on issues of ageism, gender, and violence.

Among her many honors are Pulitzer nominations for her poetry collections Just Give Me a Cool Drink of Water 'fore I Diiie and Still I Rise. She also wrote and read the inaugural poem, "On the Pulse of Morning," for President Bill Clinton's inauguration in 1993. The sixth volume of her autobiography, A Song Flung Up to Heaven, takes readers from Africa to the United States during the period of racial unrest in the 1960s and recalls her friendships with Malcolm X, Martin Luther King Jr., James Baldwin, and others. Dr. Angelou is a professor of American Studies at Wake Forest University in North Carolina. She spoke with Barnes & Noble Biography buyer Edward Ash-Milby from Miami Beach.

Q: Did you ever imagine that it would take six volumes to tell your story?

A: When I started I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings, I thought I was going to do the whole thing in that one book -- the whole of my life and beyond. But somehow I got caught up in trying to see the story of my life as a human story, as a life in the life. I thought to end that book on the birth of my son was a proper thing to do -- perfect, or as perfect as the nondivine can become. In a way, I started off writing a book for black girls because they had no Little Women and things like that. And then it was so difficult to write autobiography as literature. So as I continued to write, I thought I'd better expand the goals, so I included black boys. Then I had to expand it again, because suddenly I realized it was for everybody -- for white boys and white girls, because it's so difficult to grow up.

Q: What can an autobiography give to its readers?

A: If an autobiography is of any use, it should tell the truth. Facts can obscure the truth. You can tell the places where..., the people who..., the methods how..., the times when.... But to tell it so that the reader is there and says, "Yes, that's the truth -- I don't like it, but that's the truth." So I had to admit to having been a prostitute in the second book, Gather Together in My Name. I was married, and my husband said, "If that's true, people of every race who are intelligent and young may try to get out of the prison into which they were born -- the prison of poverty, ignorance, abuse. But there are no doorknobs. The doors are locked and there are no doorknobs. So if you write it, maybe it will help somebody." So I began to think that I would say, "You may encounter many defeats, but you must not be defeated." And how better to say that than to tell that part of my life story?

Q: Was any one book harder to write than the others?

A: This one, A Song Flung Up to Heaven. Look at what happened to Malcolm X, who was my friend and brother. Then, I had secretly hoped my marriage would re-cement. I had fallen so fond of my husband, and when he came to the States to catch me I was flattered, hopeful. And when that didn't work out, there was the Watts uprising. To come to New York and agree to go back with Reverend King and then he was killed on my birthday. And then my brother Bailey died. I've been working on this book for almost 38 years.

Nathaniel Hawthorne said, "Easy reading is damned hard writing." And to write it so well, or try to write it so simply that after the reader has put the book down, after she has gone on to make a cup of tea, after he's gone out to do some gardening, then the book and the stories come alive. That's the way I'd like to write. So this was the hardest book.

Q: The titles of your books are very lyrical. How do you come up with them?

A: Usually, I go to African-American poetry and praise songs, and sometimes sermons or just colloquial sayings. Caged Bird came from the poem "Sympathy," and so did A Song Flung Up to Heaven -- from the same verse by Paul Laurence Dunbar. The first verse is:

I know what the caged bird feels, alas!
When the sun is bright on the upland slopes;
When the wind stirs soft through the springing grass,
And the river flows like a stream of glass;
When the first bird sings and the first bud opes,
And the faint perfume from its chalice steals --
I know what the caged bird feels!
I know why the caged bird beats his wing
Till its blood is red on the cruel bars;
For he must fly back to his perch and cling
When he fain would be on the bough a-swing;
And a pain still throbs in the old, old scars
And they pulse again with a keener sting --
I know why the caged beats his wing!
I know why the caged bird sings, ah me,
When his wing is bruised and his bosom sore, --
When he beats his bars and he would be free;
It is not a carol of joy or glee,
But a prayer that he sends from his heart's deep core,
But a plea, that upward to Heaven he flings --
I know why the caged bird sings!
Q: In the final chapter you observed, "I thought if I wrote a book I would have to examine the quality of the human spirit that continues to rise despite the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune." Have you accomplished what you set out to do in your autobiographies?

A: Yes, I have accomplished much more than I ever set my sights to do, to achieve. I love the challenge of writing and being a writer. Everybody in the world who isn't a hermit or a recluse uses words in all the many languages, but those are words. So not everybody sings, not everybody dances, stops and admires a building. But everybody uses words. So the writer has to take these most common tools and, choosing a few nouns and pronouns and adverbs and verbs and adjectives and so forth, put them together and make a reader say, "That's a new way of looking at that." And that, my God, that's pretty wonderful, and at the same time, frightening. But that's what I am. I describe myself to myself as a writer. That's what I do.

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Reading Group Guide

1. Following an epigraph that refers to going home, Maya Angelou begins by describing her Pan Am flight from Ghana to the United States. What is the mood of this homecoming? How does Angelou seem to define “home?”

2. What does Angelou reveal about race and identity in her comparison of American racial tensions to the impending Ghanaian revolution?

3. The infrequent references to Angelou’s son, Guy, form a subtle parallel plot. How does his narrative reflect hers in this part of their lives?

4. Angelou focuses on three distinct American locales in A SONG FLUNG UP TO HEAVEN: California, Hawaii, and New York City. What does each of these settings impart to her life story?

5. In the last chapter, Angelou describes a social hierarchy in which all men, black and white, are perceived as superior to black women. How does Angelou respond to the various men in this book, ranging from the close bond she shares with her brother to the bitter job tryout with Norman Cousins?

6. Explore Angelou’s literary techniques. What is her tone when delivering particularly painful or startling information? How does her skill as a poet appear to influence her word choice throughout A SONG FLUNG UP TO HEAVEN?

7. Visible and prolific, Angelou is a bridge between two very different generations of African American women. What does she retain of her mother’s persona? What does Angelou appear to want the next generation to learn from her? Is pious Aunt Leah a timeless figure or an anachronism?

8. A SONG FLUNG UP TO HEAVEN raises many “what ifs”; Angelou herself imagines several hypothetical scenarios, such as the one in which she had stayed with Malcolm X in New York. Unfortunate timing and eerie coincidences beg one primary question in this memoir: how might Angelou’s path have differed had Malcolm X and Dr. King not been murdered?

9. What makes Angelou’s account of the Watts riot (chapter nine) especially enlightening? What logic does she vocalize amidst the chaos? What does the untitled poem she wrote at the kitchen table (page 74) convey that you would never have learned from news coverage of the event?

10. If this book is itself a song flung up to heaven, what is the nature of its message? Supplication? Praise? Confession? Lamentation? Why must it be flung, rather than simply sung?

11. When Dolly McPherson and Maya Angelou conspire to reveal their African lover’s hypocrisy, the two women end up feeling crestfallen. Does their reaction appear to be consequence of being female, or African American females in particular?

12. Against the backdrop of domestic revolution and international inhumanity, such as the imprisonment of Nelson Mandela, A SONG FLUNG UP TO HEAVEN depicts the author coping with the most mundane and universal aspects of life—finding work, cooking meals, navigating family crises. In what way do these everyday details mirror the larger issues brewing outside Angelou’s door?

13. Do you detect a shift in Angelou’s outlook from the time she arrives in the United States again to the visit with her mother in the book’s final pages?

14. In the last chapter, Angelou writes that she assumed composing a book would require her “to examine the quality in the human spirit that continues to rise despite the slings and arrows of outrageous fortune.” This has indeed been a recurring theme in her work; what do such examinations uncover in A SONG FLUNG UP TO HEAVEN?

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Customer Reviews

Average Rating 4.5
( 20 )
Rating Distribution

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Fri Jul 25 00:00:00 EDT 2014

    Enlightening! Great read.

    Enlightening! Great read!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Wed Aug 01 00:00:00 EDT 2012

    Very well written,holds your interest all through to the end.

    The book revealed the true character of Maya Angelou
    She exposed areas o her life that were truly amazing!

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  • Posted Mon Mar 09 00:00:00 EDT 2009

    more from this reviewer

    Excellent read...

    Wish the book was longer, I really felt as if I was there with Maya during all the events she endured. Strange that I'm reading it at the time of election because I had just read her chapter on loosing Martin the day before election day.

    Maya is a colorful writer and it took me some time to adapt to her style but I absolutely love this book it was inspiring. After reading I want to get out and be sure to be a part of the world and what's going on around me...she was a part of so much.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Tue Jun 14 00:00:00 EDT 2005

    Great!

    I can not believe anyone criticises anyone who would take a thirty year time period to examine the quality of human spirit! That not only gives Maya Angelou the right to her wide acclaim, but also the acclaim for this final installment in the 6 book journey she has taken us on. People who criticise Maya for her endever obviosuly are the reason why the quakity of humans continues to decline. Great Book!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Fri Apr 18 00:00:00 EDT 2003

    Excellent

    Maya Angelou's writings have never been a disappointment -- and this book is no different!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Mon Dec 23 00:00:00 EST 2002

    HER JOURNEY THROUGH LIFE

    Ms Angelou¿s A Song Flung Up To Heaven is a collection of her memoirs collaborated together to form this book of great historical events and how they effected her life. I was surprised at some of the events that have taken place in her life and how she chose to handle them. I was also baffled at the lifestyle she was living while networking with some of the black elite entertainers and leaders, which demonstrates it is not what you know but who you know. Ms Angelou hits hardest on her relationships with James Baldwin and the African, whom she never names. Although I thought she should have gone into more detail about her son Guy, she did express her love for him as well as her brother who had a profound affect on her stability as a woman. Ms. Angelou highlighted the Watts riots that took place in the 60¿s and all though she went into great detail about the riots, I think I may have missed the effects it had on her, nonetheless the actual events were well written and educational. I would definitely recommend this book. Stacy Campbell

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Mon Nov 25 00:00:00 EST 2002

    Satisfied...

    I don't know what's the deal with these other raters but this book was superb from beginning to end. Are you sure you rated the right book, people? Like I already predicted, the book was excellent, a page-turner, and fascinating word-play.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Sun Dec 08 00:00:00 EST 2002

    Outstanding, an understatement

    This book is incredible. These cruel other reviewers have either mistaken this book for 35- Baby Names, or they are all just drop out potheads with nothing better to do than tear apart a piece of art like this one that they could not construct in one or maybe two lifetimes!

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Thu Oct 24 00:00:00 EDT 2002

    not a good book

    I was very disappointed in this book. I'm sorry that i can't get my money back. our book club of about 20 member ,gave this book a 1 star. book rule is start a book finish it . this is one book i did not want to finish but I did. glad i don't have to pass it on.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Thu Oct 03 00:00:00 EDT 2002

    A Woman Of Strength

    Maya Angelou is not afraid to express what she feels and lifes experiences.She is a very strong willed woman.Very talented and gifted. Cassandra Dillon Author of "Reality Poems".

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Fri May 24 00:00:00 EDT 2002

    Can't you smell hack?

    It's terrifying that someone with so little talent can be so widely acclaimed. Maya Angelou's prose are almost as poorly written as her verse.

    0 out of 1 people found this review helpful.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Mon Apr 22 00:00:00 EDT 2002

    Maya Sisterspeak

    It is not often that I buy a book, go home and read it through in one sitting. In the middle of the afternoon. In the midst of too much. Too much work. Too little sleep. Serious project deadlines. Yet, Maya Angelou¿s A Song Flung Up to Heaven was there at the store where I went only¿I thought¿to buy water. But, my spirit beckoned. I bought the autobiography, hoping that it would nourish me for the afternoon, provide an oasis of calm and comfort before the rush to be productive assailed me. The first few lines of the book¿so clear, concise and conversational¿were intoxicating. I settled down to journey one more time through Angelou territory. A Song Flung Up to Heaven is a deliberation, a refreshing, resonatingly rich personal history that is a community¿s history that is a national history that is human history. Angelou invites us to reflect again on several departed giants in the African diaspora: Kwame Nkrumah, W. E. B. DuBois, Malcolm X, Martin Luther King, James Baldwin, Betty Shabazz. All of a time, determined to sweep into the social fabric of nations policy and practice that honors the humanity in all of us. In Angelou¿s sixth and [she says] last autobiography, her traveling shoes take us readers from Ghana to New York to San Francisco to Hawaii to Los Angeles. Family and friends gather to support her, to steady her in the midst of successive experiences of personal grief, sorrow and pain when close friends, first Malcolm X and then Martin Luther Kings, are gunned down days before Maya is to work with them on historic nation-building, nation-changing activities. Maya would have buckled but for the extensive network of people who responded instinctively and unstintingly to her need. A Song Flung Up to Heaven is a celebration of a woman phenomenally. Phenomenal woman: Maya Angelou.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Wed Apr 03 00:00:00 EST 2002

    Classic Maya

    This was great. I also read 'Cascade' by Dennis Klett and found it to be wonderful. Very real, emotional poetry.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Sun Apr 28 00:00:00 EDT 2002

    Great BOOK

    I was at the Festival of books and she was discussing her book. She is the best speaker, everyone should see her. I bought the book and went home to read it and i is captivating and has real good scenes.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Tue May 07 00:00:00 EDT 2002

    Sweet Read

    I always enjoy Maya Angelou's beautiful writing. I especially continue to look forward to any words written about her mother. She seemed so together, and would I have loved to have had her for a sounding board about'anything.' The book is a sweet read and perfect for a rainy afternoon sojourn.

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  • Anonymous

    Posted Thu Nov 03 00:00:00 EDT 2011

    No text was provided for this review.

  • Anonymous

    Posted Mon Jan 24 00:00:00 EST 2011

    No text was provided for this review.

  • Anonymous

    Posted Mon May 23 00:00:00 EDT 2011

    No text was provided for this review.

  • Anonymous

    Posted Mon Dec 15 00:00:00 EST 2008

    No text was provided for this review.

  • Anonymous

    Posted Fri Aug 05 00:00:00 EDT 2011

    No text was provided for this review.

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