kaguya logoKaguya
  • Home
  • My Library
  • Browse
  • Lists
  • Members
  • Discussions
Log inSign up
kaguya logoKaguya
Sign up
Home
Browse
Library
Notifications
Notifications
Profile
About
  • Privacy
  • Terms
  • Guidelines
  • Help & Support
Contribute
  • Add Book
  • Add Covers
  • Librarian Guide
Apps
AndroidiOS

© 2025 Kaguya

A Song Flung Up to Heaven
Rate book
Maya Angelou's Autobiography #6

A Song Flung Up to Heaven

Maya Angelou
•

It is 1964 and Maya Angelou is on her way back home, leaving behind her beloved - and now seriously teenage - son Guy, to finish university in Ghana. America is pulsing with the challenge of change, the civil rights movement is in full swing and that's where Maya Angelou wants to be, working alongside her friends Malcolm X and Martin Luther King.

In this marvellous account, Maya Angelou provides, with her customary wisdom, compassion and wit, a first-hand record of an extraordinarily exciting and tragic political period. She writes of 'Jimmy' Baldwin, Eldridge Cleaver, and of friends and family, and finishes with the beginnings of her career as one of America's most impressive memoir writers.

"A brilliant writer, a fierce friend and a truly phenomenal woman." Barack Obama

NonfictionMemoirBiographyAfrican AmericanPoetryRaceFeminismHistoryClassicsHistoricalSpirituality
A Song Flung Up to Heaven
A Song Flung Up to Heaven
Maya Angelou's Autobiography #6

A Song Flung Up to Heaven

Maya Angelou
Published year: 2002
Pages: 212

It is 1964 and Maya Angelou is on her way back home, leaving behind her beloved - and now seriously teenage - son Guy, to finish university in Ghana. America is pulsing with the challenge of change, the civil rights movement is in full swing and that's where Maya Angelou wants to be, working alongside her friends Malcolm X and Martin Luther King.

In this marvellous account, Maya Angelou provides, with her customary wisdom, compassion and wit, a first-hand record of an extraordinarily exciting and tragic political period. She writes of 'Jimmy' Baldwin, Eldridge Cleaver, and of friends and family, and finishes with the beginnings of her career as one of America's most impressive memoir writers.

"A brilliant writer, a fierce friend and a truly phenomenal woman." Barack Obama

NonfictionMemoirBiographyAfrican AmericanPoetryRaceFeminismHistoryClassicsHistoricalSpirituality

Reviews (0)

0 reviews

Reviews (0)

•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•
•

Latest discussions

No discussions yet.