Deep Sightings \u0026 Rescue Missions: Fiction, Essays, and Conversations by Toni Cade Bambara


Deep Sightings \u0026 Rescue Missions: Fiction, Essays, and Conversations
Title : Deep Sightings \u0026 Rescue Missions: Fiction, Essays, and Conversations
Author :
Rating :
ISBN : 0679774076
ISBN-10 : 9780679774075
Language : English
Format Type : Paperback
Number of Pages : 272
Publication : First published January 1, 1996

Edited and with a Preface by Toni Morrison, this posthumous collection of short stories, essays, and interviews offers lasting evidence of Bambara's passion, lyricism, and tough critical intelligence. Included are tales of mothers and daughters, rebels and seeresses, community activists and aging gangbangers, as well as essays on film and literature, politics and race, and on the difficulties and necessities of forging an identity as an artist, activist, and black woman. It is a treasure trove not only for those familiar with Bambara's work, but for a new generation of readers who will recognize her contribution to contemporary American letters.


Deep Sightings \u0026 Rescue Missions: Fiction, Essays, and Conversations Reviews


  • Alonzo Vereen

    This collection, published posthumously, of Toni Cade Bambara’s unfinished essays and short stories is at times wildly difficult to read and wildly stunning.

    Of the short stories included, “The War of the Wall,” “Ice,” and “Luther on Sweet Auburn” are my favorites. In these, Bambara employs the voice and cultural outlook that make her more polished stories works of genius - “The Lesson” and “My Man Bovanne” are two such stories that come to mind.

    The nonfiction, on the other hand, is all about independent filmmaking, an art form Bambara invested much of her creative energy into during the latter half of her career.

    If you’re looking for advice about writing, you aren’t gonna find it here. If you’re looking for biting critiques re: literature, you aren’t gonna find them here either. What you’ll get are drafts, at every manifestation, of Bambara’s unpublished fiction and essays - drafts in all their ugliness; drafts filled with grace.

  • Ryland Jones

    In this collection of short stories, I focused on "War of the Wall." In this story, two young African American children are walking to school when they see a woman painting on their neighborhood's wall (a wall they had also carved the name of a war soldier into). Throughout the story, they watch as she slowly finishes her mural, commenting between themselves about how this is all a waste of time, until she finishes. Her mural represents the neighborhood, and she has depicted many of it's inhabitants (including the children). The children then find out that the artist was related to the man who's name they had carved into the brick.

    This story would be a great way to teach people that while you have your own internal identity, you also have an outward identity that people will judge and recognize you off of. Now this is not to say that one should change their physical appearance to make other's feel more at ease, but simply to say that someone may see your physical identity as something more beautiful than you do (and then choose to make a mural about it). Physical appearance is a big thing in middle school as that's generally when you first realize "what's wrong with yourself" once you hit puberty. So while you may find your physical identity to be something lack luster, other's may find it to be beautiful and will make beautiful things with it with you as their muse.

    In this story I would probably talk about voice. The two children's voice are so present and unique and descriptive throughout the story. The voice of these kids creates a really strong and powerful story. For this story I would do "don't judge a book by it's cover" and "sometimes you can judge a book by it's cover." Both of these have to deal with making observations due to one's physical appearance and their behavior. I would prefer if students did both activities about themselves to prevent any bullying in the class.

  • Sidik Fofana

    (SIX WORD REVIEW): Bambara opens doors, Harlem and world.

  • David Garza

    I picked up this collection because of the Toni Morrison preface, not really sure what I was getting into beyond that.

    The first section of this collection of fiction and essays focuses on Bambara's short stories. From the get go, it's abundantly clear that she's a weaver of words and perspectives. She always seems to bring out an unexpected shift that you can't quite put your finger on at first. I recognized her talent, yet I didn't connect as strongly to the stories as I wanted to. I decided to come back to her fiction section, give it another go, after I read through the essay section.

    Re-reading them, they're all great examples of story-telling. And even though I still did not feel as "close" to them as I would have liked (a real possibility is that they were not written for me, which is totally valid), I would recommend them to anyone because the writing's really good. There's a sense of nostalgia in them (seems to be on personal level rather than a societal level) and even a certain degree of longing (although I don't think it's for the past exactly). The stories end on paper, but it's obvious there's a beyond for each of them; that's where we should go...

    Read the stories, but stay for the essays. That is where the meat of this collection really is. Bambara does not let up on the craft of writing just because these are not fiction pieces. The essays on literature and film, politics and race, all seem to bare the brunt of Bambara's focus and energy. They have more weight than her fiction and are the space in which Bambara speaks directly into our eyes; she really wants us to listen here. I'd recommend reading these in tandem with
    Toni Morrison's
    Playing in the Dark: Whiteness and the Literary Imagination.



  • Liz

    The fiction was brilliant but the essays felt too dated to hold my attention.

  • Tony Lindsay

    Toni Cade Bambara
    There are writers whose prose know no boundaries of genre; they write short stories and novels with extreme skill, and many of these writers become legends for their novels and short stories like “The Lesson,” “Raymond’s Run,” and of this group there are those whose prose is considered spiritual – not merely the plot or characters, but the words reach a reader’s spirt and bring about an internal change; they write novels that causes a soul to acknowledge the commune of ideas, novels like ‘The Salt Eaters’, and ‘Those Bones are Not my Child.’
    Toni Morrison writes of such a writer. From the preface of Toni Cade Bambara’s collection of fiction, essays, and conversations, ‘Deep Sightings and Rescue Missions’ Morrison states:
    I don’t know if she knew the heart cling of her fiction. It’s pedagogy, its use, she knew very well, but I have often wondered if she knew how brilliant at it she was. There was no division in her mind between optimism and ruthless vigilance; between aesthetic obligation and the aesthetics of obligation. There was no doubt whatsoever that the work she did had work to do. (ix)
    Bambara’s writing was spiritual, political, and purposeful, and all three characteristics are abundantly present in ‘Deep Sightings and Rescue Missions.”
    In the short story, “Going Critical,” the plot conflicts around a clairvoyant mother preparing her seer daughter for her death, “Oh, girl, don’t you know it’s the way of things for children to bury elders” (Bambara 20). Bambara begins the tale with slight tension between the mother and the daughter; their spirits are vexed with each other. Bambara subtlety informs the reader of their extra abilities, by having them meet others with psychic powers. At the end of the story, the exceptional is expected; being clairvoyant or a seer is the norm in text opening the reader’s mind to what could be.
    Bambara, a writer prior to, during, and after the Black arts movement possessed strong Black Nationalist, and Black Feminist political views (editor of the anthology ‘The Black Woman’). She did not try to separate her politics from her art. Morrison, “More often she met the art/politics fake debate with a slight wave of the fingers on her beautiful hand, like the dismissal of a mindless, desperate fly who had maybe two little hours of life left” (ix – x). These opinions are apparent in the essay, “Language and the Writer.” Bambara:
    The normalization of the term “minority” – for people who are not white, male, bourgeois, and Christian-is a treacherous one. The term, which has an operational role in the whole politics of silence, invisibility, and amnesia, comes from the legal arena. It says that a minority or a minor may not give testimony in court without an advocate, without a go between, without a mediating someone monitoring the speaking and the tongue-which is one of the many reasons I do not use the term “minority” for anybody, most especially not myself.
    Here it is quite clear that she is speaking to the collective consciousness of the era, no one should think of themselves as a minority as less than a white, male, bourgeoisie, Christian.
    Another story that is extremely strong with purpose is “Luther on Sweet Auburn.” In this tale, Bambara introduces a one time protector and lover; a man she chose from an established type, a war counselor, a tough guy who was behind the times, and unable to keep up with the present. Through him, Bambara warns that the past belongs in the past; what was needed yesterday might not fit into today.
    Bambara is a writer’s writer; her craft is community based and spiritual in message, plot, and prose; ‘Deep Sightings and Rescue Missions’ is the work of a writer who has something to say.

  • Jessica M Williams

    Some essays were difficult to read. However, my favorite essays were “How She Came By Her Name,” and “The Education of a Story Teller.” There was something about these essays in particular that brought tears to my eyes. I am glad to have encountered this book, it opened my mind, heart, and gave my body a whole new way to feel.

    3.5/5

    Thank you.