correspondence

Type: 
Topical Term
Subfield: 
v
Alias: 
correspondence

C.S. Lewis letters to children

1988
A collection of letters from the English author of the Narnia books to a variety of children.

What I know now

letters to my younger self
2006
A collection of letters in which forty-one famous women write letters to the women they once were, offering advice and insights into life, love, relationships, and the world.

Remember me to Harlem

the letters of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, 1925-1964
2001
Personal letters help profile the lives and careers of Langston Hughes and Carl Van Vechten, and recount the unique friendship the two men had with one another.

Soulfires

young Black men on love and violence
1996
Collection of writings in which young African-American male artists, poets, novelists, rappers, filmmakers, journalists, and romantics from diverse backgrounds address the major themes of love and violence through fiction, biography, poetry, letters, essays, songs, and other genres.

Inside a thug's heart

with original poems and letters by Tupac Shakur
2009
Presents the correspondence and telephone calls between Tupac Shakur, a rapper who was shot and died in September, 1996, and Angela Ardis, a woman who wrote to him on a dare, while he was incarcerated in Rikers Island and Dannemora State Prison in New York.

On the altar of freedom

a black soldier's Civil War letters from the front
1991
Contains a series of letters written by a black soldier to a Massachusetts newspaper during the Civil War.

The flip side of soul

letters to my son
1989
The author writes a series of letters to his son about the status of today's African-Americans.

This waiting for love

Helene Johnson, poet of the Harlem Renaissance
2000
Presents a selection of poetry and correspondence by Helene Johnson, and includes biographical information about the Harlem Renaissance poet.

Dear Mr. President

1993
One week after the November 3, 1992 presidental election, The Washington Post encouraged school-aged children to write letters to the new President, Bill Clinton, over 10,000 children responded, and they had a lot on their minds.

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