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I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (1969)

by Maya Angelou

MembersReviewsPopularityAverage ratingConversations / Mentions
15,153224378 (4.03)1 / 566
English (215)  Italian (3)  Spanish (2)  French (2)  German (1)  Catalan (1)  All languages (224)
Showing 1-25 of 215 (next | show all)
Book 67
I know why the caged bird sings.
Maya Angelou.
Peter bought me this probably 20 years ago. Although a difficult subject it's not a difficult read.
8/10
6/100 books that changed the world. ( )
  janicearkulisz | Aug 2, 2024 |
We the reader are let into the incredible story of the childhood of Maya Angelou. It is a heart wrenching story yet not sad because Maya writes with such love and understanding and dignity. I learned what it is like to be female and black in a small southern town. A powerful memoir. ( )
  Smits | Apr 1, 2024 |
It was an interesting read, not what I thought it would be, and not as compelling as I’d presumed based on what I’d heard about it.

Well-written but a little too rambling and untethered to any kind of compelling story. As it’s not a story, but a person remembering their life, in their own words, I guess that is to be expected. ( )
  73pctGeek | Mar 5, 2024 |
A powerful autobiography by one of America's true icons. ( )
  ben_r47 | Feb 22, 2024 |
Beautiful and lyrical and not at all expected grateful to have missed it as a requirement in highschool and to have the opportunity now. Something every woman should read. ( )
  Blanket_Dragon | Jan 23, 2024 |
She kinda just talks about little things she would do as a kid growing up. Makes me wonder if she smoked weed? And she starts to write these big paragraphs towards the end of the book. I don't have much interest in the things I do. She kinda had a repressed childhood high in the racist South and it kinda waned and became bored & weird once she attended High School in San Francisco. It almost kinda reminds me of my grown upbringing but 60 years later? "Its a Small World After All":)

It's not really quite a journal but more like message board postings of little anecdotes the style she wrote it in like she has her own forum. ( )
  VidKid369 | Dec 19, 2023 |
A classic in American literature, one I first read years ago as a freshman in high school. I remember appreciating it then, but thinking it was a bit boring (a 14-year-old's opinion, on a book being taught in high school English class). Re-reading gave me a much better appreciation of it, and of Angelou as a writer.

The story meanders a bit, but ultimately heads us in a single direction. And during that meandering Angelou shows us what an exceptional writer she is and her ability to write different styles of story. (One of the chapters is basically a ghost story.)

As I got towards the end of the book, I began to see what 14-year-old me was thinking, in that it slows down a bit, and it took me a while to get through the last 100 pages. But overall a really good book by an American icon. ( )
  rumbledethumps | Nov 25, 2023 |
I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings is the 1969 autobiography of her early years by American author-poet Maya Angelou. This is a powerful coming of age story that covers her life from age three to eighteen, ending with the birth of her son. The author details some of her struggles with both racism and misogyny and she explains how the love of literature, her strength of character and her eventual acceptance and embracing of black culture allowed her to move forward and feel empowered.

Most of her growing years were spent in the small segregated town of Stamps, Arkansas under the care of her paternal grandmother who implanted a strict moral code. They are taught to avoid contact with white people and stick to their own kind but nevertheless there were some racist incidents. When she and her brother were sent to live with their mother in St. Louis, eight year old Maya is raped by her mother’s boyfriend, another trauma for her to overcome.

I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings is considered a classic of African-American writing as her story shines a light not just on her race and gender but many other aspects as well. She wasn’t afraid of showing that at times she was confused, uncertain and naive which in turn, allowed me to see her as a real person and become invested in her childhood journey. ( )
  DeltaQueen50 | Sep 24, 2023 |
I'm glad I finally read this book. ( )
  MrDickie | Sep 13, 2023 |
I place autobiographies with the author's place of birth, which Maya, birth name Marguerite Johnson, was born in St. Louis, Missouri, on 4 April 1928. But in this book, Maya begins her story at age 3 in Stamps, Arkansas.

Wow! Be sure to watch the short 22 minute video on Maya Angelou's Goodreads page before reading this book. You will get a great feel for her voice and true character. She revisits Stamps, Arkansas. After her parent's divorce, her father shipped her and her brother, Bailey, on a freight train all alone from California to Stamps, Arkansas, to live for the next 10 years with their grandmother who they would call Momma. She was 3-1/2 years old; Bailey was 4.

They lived in the back of the only black store in Stamps, the Wm. Johnson General Store, pictured in the video, which her grandmother owned and ran for 25 years. This was the hub of east Stamps and the safest place for Maya. They rarely crossed the railroad tracks that separated the whites from the blacks. They were so segregated that most black children didn't know what a real white person even looked like. They only heard about them. Only twice a year would their grandmother give Bailey and Maya money to cross the tracks for meat, usually liver, for the dinner table.

Her brother, Bailey, was the pride of the Henderson/Johnson family. He was everything Maya wasn't. Maya frequently got picked on about her ugliness, even from among her own black people. Bailey was the one to give Maya her name when they were little. He would never call her Marguerite. He would always say, Mya Sister. As time went by her name became "Maya".

It's interesting that the poor working people of Stamps didn't feel the Great Depression for two years because they were already so poor and lived off the land. It wasn't until the price of cotton they sold dropped so low, from ten cents to five cents a pound of cotton that they realized the Great Depression wasn't just for white folks.

Her father showed up one day from California, picked up the kids and drove them straight to St. Louis to see their mother, who was, in Maya's eyes, too beautiful to have children. But, here in St. Louis, they lived and learned more of the rough nightlife of their mother and her mother's wild and loud family. They were a mean bunch and her white German Grandmother Baxter married into the black world and had a lot of pull with the policeman, and with the lowest of criminals. They lived with their Baxter grandparents for a while then moved in with their mother and her boyfriend who ended up raping her when she was 7-1/2 years old. This is when she became mute. Maya stopped talking. They were only in St. Louis one year before being shipped back to Stamps, Arkansas, on a train. The town people gathered around them with questions about the north, and treated them like they were great travellers. The blacks there in Stamps couldn't understand how people made their money if they didn't grow cotton. Her brother, Bailey, played it up while she remained mute. Maya didn't like St. Louis as much as she didn't like Stamps. In her mind, these were only temporary homes.

She later goes to visit her dad and his live-in girlfriend in California. What a wild ride. He brings her into Mexico where he disappears at times for drinks, drugs and a romp in the sack with a Mexican gal. He was so wasted, and at age 15 with no driving experience, she had to drive them back across the border into California. It really was a miracle she made it through those growing years and became the person we all grew to love and admire.

Maya writes: "The needs of a society determines its ethics." She might be right about that, just take a look around us.

She died at age 86 on 28 May 2014 in
Winston-Salem, North Carolina. ( )
  MissysBookshelf | Aug 27, 2023 |
This book was a bit hit or miss for me. The first half I did not enjoy very much. The childish tone and perspective was clunky, and got in the way of the story Maya was trying to tell. In between the childish narrative, there'd be moments of beautiful prose, where she'd comment on things from a different perspective. These were the moments that I were reading for, and made me glad I did not give up on the book.

The last third of the book, in California, was incredible. The writing was just gorgeous, the content was interesting, and it had a few moments of insight or beautiful prose that literally made my jaw drop. Here are a few quotes that I really enjoyed.

"The needs of a society determine its ethics, and in the Black American ghettos the hero is that man who is offered only the crumbs from his country's table but by ingenuity and courage is able to take for himself a Lucullan feast."

"To be left alone on the tightrope of youthful unknowing is to experience the excruciating beauty of full freedom and the threat of eternal indecision. Few, if any, survive their teens. Most surrender to the vague but murderous pressure of adult conformity." ( )
  Andjhostet | Jul 4, 2023 |
This really exceeded my expectations - I think her Oprah-association and the new-agey sounding title made me delay reading this for several years. Angelou's strength is in the breadth of her experience as a child - we see the abject racism of small town Arkansas compared with the more subtle forms found in St. Louis and California. The most powerful chapters depict the demeaning words of a white speaker at her middle school graduation, and the refusal of a white dentist to treat a black child in extreme pain. These carefully chosen anecdotes reveal the permutations of racism and their various devastating effects. ( )
  jonbrammer | Jul 1, 2023 |
This book was a real eye-opener for me. It taught me about the trials and troubles faced by the author and her triumphs in dealing with them. Her relationships with her family members are explored in detail and the loving ones are a joy to read about, while the more difficult ones are very sad. Some relationships bring love and problems both of course - that is life. A great sort. ( )
  rosiezbanks | Mar 23, 2023 |
I have never read Maya Angelou before and what a treat this book is. I don't know why, but it reminded me a lot of A Tree Grows in Brooklyn except I both liked it more and was more moved by it. It's a short and easy read to top it off. Just a beautiful coming of age story written by someone who both knows how to tell a story and how to create literature.

This memoir traces Marguerite Johnson's early life from the age of 3 to her late teenage years. She uses small anecdotes from her life to really highlight what living as a black person was like in the South in the early to middle part of the 20th century. As you can imagine, life is hard and involves some serious traumas, but Maya is optimistic and a survivor. She writes in a way that is both simple and oftentimes beautifully poetic. Oddly, I sometimes felt as though there were two different writers. Sometimes she is so straightforward. Other times, the writing is so beautifully lyrical and requires more thought to interpret. I loved both styles and actually felt that the movement between the two made the book so readable and yet literary at the same time.

Just right. ( )
  Anita_Pomerantz | Mar 23, 2023 |
A look at Maya Angelou's first sixteen years of life, parents who would ship her and her brother alone to Stamps Arkansas, a molestation and pregnancy . A story about hardship and her self survival overcoming many obstacles in her life. ( )
  foof2you | Mar 7, 2023 |
CW: Sexual assault and rape of a girl. ( )
  Mrs_Tapsell_Bookzone | Feb 14, 2023 |
read in library at Sacramento Community College - which institution played a large part in my life considering I attended for one semester ( )
  Overgaard | Jan 24, 2023 |
Beautiful ( )
  guptaanuj | Jan 6, 2023 |
“If growing up is painful for the Southern Black girl, being aware of her displacement is the rust on the razor that threatens the throat.
It is an unnecessary insult.”

Those first few pages hit hard! And really, most of this book hits hard. A really, really good read! And an important one!

The book begins with the author as a child, and ends with the author having a child. It’s an incredible life’s journey, even if it only covers about thirteen years!

On a side note, at about page 74 of this edition is the section that I used to teach in my 8th grade English classes. I hope some of those young minds went on to read the rest of this! ( )
  Stahl-Ricco | Dec 27, 2022 |
Good autobiography of a black girl growing up (Maya). It's amazing it took me so long to read this, since I like this sort of thing. There are some mature parts, so I'd say you should be at least 16 before reading this. Gave me even more empathy for the black experience and the effect of broken families. ( )
  kslade | Dec 8, 2022 |
Memoir of Maya’s Angelou’s challenging childhood from age 3 to 17. Her parents divorced and sent her to live with her paternal grandmother in the depression-era segregated south. At times, she was reunited with her mother, but these instances ultimately resulted in more trouble. The subject matter is somber and distressing, including bigotry, hatred, rape, and abandonment. She inserts humor to lighten the mood, but overall, I felt a lingering anger in her words, not that I blame her. She related her early years through a series of memorable, but choppy, episodes that imparted a feeling of what it must have been like to grow up in a hostile environment. It was not all bleak, though. She demonstrated the power of books and education to provide an escape and highlighted several people that influenced her positively, such as her grandmother, her brother, an Arkansas woman, and one of her teachers. Recommended to those interested in African American history, biographies/memoirs, or frank stories of a hard childhood. Contains graphic descriptions of sexual abuse. ( )
  Castlelass | Oct 30, 2022 |
Here's what I wrote in 2008 about this read: "Wonderful, she's wonderful. Can't wait to hear her speak when she's in Cincinnati June, 2008 (have tickets!) This autobiography was on the New York Times best seller list for three years. Re-read someday." ( )
  MGADMJK | Sep 20, 2022 |
Old-school story-telling at it's best. Mark Twain and Harper Lee come to mind, to give you a feel of how delicious the story-telling is. Her matter-of-factly strength, depth and clarity are a delight. A must read. ( )
  SwatiRavi | Jun 27, 2022 |
Inspiring, one of a kind. ( )
  Windyone1 | May 10, 2022 |
Listening to the audio version, read by the author herself, made this extra powerful. What a life, what a woman she was. ( )
  viviennestrauss | Apr 16, 2022 |
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