Poets & Writers

Why We Write

STEPHANIE STOKES OLIVER has spent her career in magazine and book publishing. Formerly the fashion and beauty merchandising editor at Glamour, founding editor in chief of Heart & Soul, and editor in chief of Essence.com, she most recently served as vice president of Unity Publishing. She is the author of three books and the editor of Black Ink: Literary Legends on the Peril, Power, and Pleasure of Reading and Writing, published in January by 37 Ink.

IN SEPTEMBER 2017 Hurricane Irma swept through the Caribbean island of Anguilla, where my husband and I had moved from the United States in 2007 to “follow our bliss.” Blessedly, the house made of concrete stood strong against the Category 5 winds. But extensive water damage from broken windows destroyed much of our book collection, including boxes of the three books I’ve written. I could have been devastated—it certainly felt overwhelming—but I tried to put it in the perspective of history. My forebears had experienced far worse.

For generations of African Americans, reading and writing was illegal and punishable by death. In many Southern states, for the more than two hundred years of slavery, it was against the law for an enslaved person

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Poets & Writers

Poets & Writers3 min read
Maldonado Leads the Academy
Last June, Ricardo Alberto Maldonado became the first Latinx president and executive director of the Academy of American Poets. Founded in 1934 “to support American poets at all stages of their careers, and to foster the appreciation of contemporary
Poets & Writers5 min read
Picking What to Submit
WINNING a writing contest can lead to amazing things beyond a fancy line on your CV, including prize money, publication, and promotion. Contests can also connect you with judges and other writers who respect your work. But as with many aspects of the
Poets & Writers17 min read
Recent Winners
Karisma Price of New Orleans won the 2023 Stanley Kunitz Memorial Prize for “The Art of London Firearms.” She received $1,000, and her poem was published in the September/October 2023 issue of American Poetry Review. The editors judged. The annual aw

Related Books & Audiobooks