Skip to main content
Top of the Page

Get on the write path! Become an AWP member today.

The Writer's Chronicle logo


Header image: Cover of Dead Things and Where to Put Them by Marina Carreira, which shows a person whose features are replaced with white scribbles

Running Wild/RIZE Press
119 pages
May 26, 2025

Shonda Buchanan weaves a prism of language, sound and light around and through the life of concert pianist, singer and Civil Rights activist, the incomprehensible Nina Simone. With this book, Buchanan is declaring this The Century of the Black Woman, providing a realistic glimpse into not only Simone’s life, but the lives of Black women in America, past and present, and their choices in a myopic, unforgiving country. A grandchild of enslaved Africans, American Indians and Irish migrants, born into poverty as Eunice Waymon in a traditionally large family, Nina Simone lived a life few Black American women lived during the Jim Crow era in the South, yet rose to ultimately impact the world with her creative genius and determined spirit. This book is both an emotional and historical excavation of an artist’s life, capturing the rise and descent of that life, including Simone’s family history, her childhood and young womanhood, as well as the addiction, mental health struggles and abuse. The Lost Songs of Nina Simone embodies the rich legacy—the pleats between the cloth—of Simone’s artistry, beauty, self-immolation and rage.

End of Free Preview

Association of Writers & Writing Programs dog-ear logo

The Writer’s Chronicle is the official publication of the 
Association of Writers and Writing Programs (AWP).

Join AWP today for full access

Back to Top