Becky Birtha

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Becky Birtha
Born (1948-10-11) October 11, 1948 (age 75)
Hampton, Virginia, U.S.
Ethnicity African-American
Occupation Author, poet
Website www.beckybirtha.net

Becky Birtha (born October 11, 1948) is an American poet and children's author who lives in the greater Philadelphia area.[1] She is best known for her poetry and short stories depicting African-American and lesbian relationships, often focusing on topics such as interracial relationships, emotional recovery from a breakup, single parenthood and adoption. Her poetry was featured in the acclaimed 1983 anthology of African-American feminist writing Home Girls: A Black Feminist Anthology, edited by Barbara Smith and published by the Kitchen Table: Women of Color Press. She has won a Lambda Literary award for her poetry. She has been awarded grants from the Pew Fellowships in the Arts,[2] the National Endowment for the Arts[3] and the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts[3] to further her literary works. In recent years she has written two children's historical fiction picture books about the African-American experience.

Early life

Birtha was born on October 11, 1948, in Hampton, Virginia, to Jessie Moore Birtha and Herbert Marshall Birtha. She is the younger sister of Rachel Birtha Eitches, a former international radio broadcaster for the Voice of America.[4] She self-identifies as an African-American with Cherokee, Catawba, African, and Irish heritage, all of which inform her writing.[5]

Birtha grew up in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania.[6] She attended the State University of New York at Buffalo for a Bachelor of Science in Child Studies in 1973 and later obtained a Master of Fine Arts in Writing from the Vermont College of Fine Arts in 1984.[5] In addition to her writing, she has worked as a teacher, a legal librarian, and as a representative for an adoption agency.[5]

Career and writings

Birtha's first published book of short stories was For Nights Like This One: Stories of Loving Women (1983), an anthology of short stories about lesbian relationships.[6] Her second book, Lovers' Choice, continues Birtha's focus upon the experience of marginalized African-American women in such stories as "Route 23: 10th and Bigler to Bethlehem Pike", in which a desperate mother takes her children on an all-night public bus ride through the city of Philadelphia in order to keep them warm.[7]

She wrote the foreword for Breaking Silence (1983) by Anne B. Keating in November 1983.[8] Birtha and Keating were members of a local feminist writers' workshop in Philadelphia under the guise of a local chapter of the Feminist Writers Guild.[9]

In 1991, Birtha published The Forbidden Poems, an anthology of poetry focusing on lesbian relationships. According to Birtha, "Several [of the] poems were written as part of the process of recovering from the breakup of a 10-year lesbian relationship, of trying to find a way to deal with the feelings that the breakup produced in [her]".[10] The Publishers Weekly review of The Forbidden Poems states that in her writings Birtha exhibits a "considerable ability to endow ordinary perceptions and occurrences with a profound significance" in her depictions of a lesbian community that is "stable, loving and creative--and whose members can all make a great cup of tea: 'even a hardcore stomping deisel dyke / can't ruin a pot of boiling water.'"[11] Her works have been published in Azalea: A Magazine by Third World Lesbians, Conditions, Sinister Wisdom and Women: a Journal of Liberation. She writes book reviews for The New Women's Times Feminist Review.[6] Ed Hermance, owner and manager of the Philadelphia gay and lesbian bookstore Giovanni's Room, has stated that Birtha's stories "have a vivid sense of place as well as an emotional depth rare among storytellers".[12]

Speaking at the 13th Annual Trenton Writers Conference in 1994, Birtha discussed her career as a writer, stating: "Have being black, a woman and lesbian been the biggest barriers I have had to overcome to become a successful writer? ... No, in fact,... I celebrate it. I am also an adoptive parent, a single mother and a Quaker, and that has not stopped me from writing, either."[13]

In later years, Birtha transitioned to writing primarily for children. Her first children's book Grandmama’s Pride (2005) has earned the Golden Kite book award and placement in the master reading lists of Arkansas, Kansas, Missouri and Georgia.[14] Her second picture book Lucky Beans (2010) was named as one of the New York Public Library's 100 Titles for Reading and Sharing 2010 as well as one of Smithsonian Magazine′s 2010 Notable Books for Children. Birtha is a member of the Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators.[15]

Personal life

Birtha lives with her partner Nancy and daughter Tasha in Delaware County, Pennsylvania.[16]

She practiced Balkan folkdancing for over seventeen years and later studied other forms of modern and folk dance.[6] Birtha is a member of the Royal Scottish Country Dance Society.[16] Her current hobbies are folk dance and playing the hammered dulcimer.[16]

She is a member of the Religious Society of Friends (Quakers).[16] In February, 1991, she gave a keynote address to the Friends for Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, Transgender, and Queer Concerns conference in which she described writing as a meditative and healing process that connects her to her Quaker faith.[3]

Awards

In 1985, Becky Birtha received an Individual Fellowship in Literature from the Pennsylvania Council on the Arts.[3] She later received a Creative Writing Fellowship Grant from the National Endowment for the Arts in 1988.[3]

She won a Pushcart Prize in 1989 for her story "Jonnieruth".[17]

In 1992, she won one of the 4th Lambda Literary Awards for her anthology of lesbian poetry, The Forbidden Poems (1991).[18]

She was awarded one of the Pew Fellowships in the Arts grants for $50,000 for the year 1993.[2][19]

Her children's book Grandmama's Pride (2005) won the 2005 Society of Children's Book Writers and Illustrators Golden Kite Honor Book for Picture Book Text.[14]

Her children's book Lucky Beans (2010) won the 2010 Arkansas Diamond Primary Book Award.[20]

Selected work

Short stories

Poetry

Anthologies

Bibliography

  • Literature by Black Women: A List of Books (1983)

Children's books

See also

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References

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