I am a stranger to half measures. With life I am on the attack, restlessly ferreting out each pleasure, foraging for answers, wringing from it even the pain. I ransack life, hunt it down. I am the hungry peasants storming the palace gates. I will have my share. No matter how it tastes.
Marita GoldenTo my father, who told me the stories that matter. To my mother, who taught me to remember them.
Marita GoldenWe black women must forgive black men for not protecting us against slavery, racism, white men, our confusion, their doubts. And black men must forgive black women for our own sometimes dubious choices, divided loyalties, and lack of belief in their possibilities. Only when our sons and our daughters know that forgiveness is real, existent, and that those who love them practice it, can they form bonds as men and women that really can save and change our community.
Marita GoldenRacism is a virus. And since nobody's really looking too hard for a cure it reproduces itself over and over again.
Marita GoldenLove is going to replace life and from then on it's all smooth sailing. Love will replace life.
Marita GoldenNovelists have to love humanity to write anything worthwhile. Poets have to love themselves.
Marita GoldenThe symbiotic relationship between reading and writing is a cornerstone of our individual intellectual journey and our educational system. We write as an act of self-expression. We read because language renders unto us the vitality of real and imagined experience.
Marita GoldenIronically, white America will catapult books about race to the top of the best-seller list, even as racism remains a national open wound. Obsession ain't solution, however, because reading even at its most intense and verisimilitudinous is vicarious, and once you close the book you're off the hook.
Marita GoldenI quickly learned that motherhood was a high wire act sometimes performed without a net.
Marita GoldenImagination bound us stronger than love. Within its limitless borders we launched ships and love affairs, discovered lost worlds, made buildings and babies, found husbands, wrote letters and Broadway plays. We made ourselves up everyday.
Marita Golden