On May 28, 2014 8:07 AM, "Carol Davis" wrote:
News this morning.....MAYA ANGELOU has.passed......
Folks....we've lost a wonderful force for good in our world...
If you get to see the news today..and review her very difficult life...you will see an indomitable Spirit
....she carried the banner for LOVE.....GRACE....FORGIVENESS....PEACE...AND ALL THE MANY QUALITIES WE REACH FOR...
WE ARE THE LOSERS WITH HER PASSING...
SHE IS THE WINNER...EVOLVING TO THE GREAT SPIRIT SHE IS...
GOD BLESS YOU MAYA ANGELOU...THANK YOU FOR ALL YOU CAME TO TEACH HUMANITY AND MADE EVERY ATTEMPT TO DO SO....
LET'S HOPE WE HAVE LEARNED THRU YOUR PAIN...AND LOVELINESS....
MANY LOVELY BLESSINGS, DEAR ONE, AS YOU MOVE ON TO YET ANOTHER EXPERIENCE ON YOUR JOURNEY....
YOU GAVE US 86 YEARS......YOUR IMPRINT WILL BE WITH US FOR ETERNITY....
Let all of us continue to learn the lessons she strived to impart to a world in strife.....
Dear Lady....THANK YOU....
cd
Maya Angelou, author and poet, dead at 86
Video: Maya Angelou, one of America's most celebrated poets, novelists and civil-rights activists has passed away. Angelou, who served on two Presidential committees and was awarded numerous awards, was 86 years old. (May 28)
American author and poet Maya Angelou, who is best known for her groundbreaking autobiography "I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings," has died at age 86 in North Carolina, her publisher confirmed on Wednesday.
The prolific African-American writer penned more than 30 books, won numerous awards, and was honored last year by the National Book Awards for her service to the literary community.
"Dr. Angelou has passed in Winston-Salem," said Sally Marvin, of Random House.
No other details were immediately available.
Angelou provided eloquent commentary on race, gender and living life to its fullest in poems and memoirs. Her latest work "Mom & Me & Mom," about her mother and grandmother and what they taught her, was released last year.
"She was beyond simply being a writer of autobiography and poetry. I think she transcended the idea of writing and using writing as a transcendence medium to further the individual," Harold Augenbraum, the executive director of the National Book Foundation, told Reuters.
"She was an extraordinary symbol in the United States of what can accomplished using the arts," he added.
Wake Forest University also mourned the loss of Angelou.
"Dr. Angelou was a national treasure whose life and teachings inspired millions around the world, including countless students, faculty, and staff at Wake Forest, where she served as Reynolds Professor of American Studies since 1982," the university said in a statement.
"Our thoughts and prayers are with Dr. Angelou's family and friends during this difficult time."
It added that details about a campus memorial service will be announced at a later date.
"I Know Why the Cage Bird Sings," a coming-of-age story in a hostile society in the American South in the 1930s and '40s that deals with racism and rape, is considered an American classic.
In addition to her many books, she was a Grammy winner for three spoken-word albums. She had a home in Winston-Salem, North Carolina, where she was a professor of American studies at Wake Forest University.
Reuters
2 comments:
Great lady indeed. RIP
A BEAUTIFUL WOMAN INDEED, DEEP ROOTED SPIRITUAL. WE WILL LEARN ALOT THROUGH HER WRITINGS AND IN THE LIFE SHE LED.
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