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The Tennessee Tribune, The
New York Beacon, The Long Beach Times, and The Amsterdam News
Former
Editor-in-Chief of Essence Magazine
Opens Inn for Black Writers
by Jamie Walker
Washington,
D.C.--Hundreds of book lovers (in addition to a
host of best-selling authors, literary activists,
and media personnel) joined Monique Greenwood,
author and former editor-in-chief of Essence
magazine, along with her husband, Glenn Pogue,
Saturday October 11, 2003, for the grand opening
of Akwaaba D.C. Inn.
Bebe Moore Campbell, Marita Golden, Donna Hill,
Bernice McFadden, Patricia Elam, Stanice Anderson,
Asha Bandele, Robin D. Stone, and many other
note-worthy authors, editors, and publicists like
Vanesse Lloyd-Sgambati were all in attendance to
help celebrate what promises to be an incredible
and highly resourceful bed and breakfast Inn for
book lovers, new and published writers.
Akwaaba, which means "welcome" in a
language spoken in Ghana, West Africa, is located
at 1708 16th St., N.W., in Washington, D.C., and
situated in the landmark Dupont Circle area of the
nation's capitol. Just minutes from Metro, fine
restaurants, shops, a quick tour of the White
House or national mall, Akwaaba D.C. is a stroll
away from the historic "U Street," where
legendary African American authors and jazz
musicians from the Harlem Renaissance frequently
performed, networked, and convened.
Personally decorated by Greenwood (along with the
help of Kuumba Home Staging & Design), Akwaaba
D.C. is gifted to feature the artwork of Gilbert
Fletcher, author of Painted Voices: An Artist's
Journey into the World of Black Writers, whose
memorable, colorful paintings of African American
authors like Alice Walker; Sonia Sanchez;
Gwendolyn Brooks; Robert Hayden; James Baldwin;
and Zora Neale Hurston adorn the walls.
Greenwood transformed the 1920s brownstone (which
is sister to two other Inn's she owns in the
historic Stuyvesant Heights section of Brooklyn
and Cape May, New Jersey) into a stunning five-story
bed and breakfast that has a total of eight guest
rooms (each with their own private baths); a
"self-contained writers retreat"
apartment suite; an innkeepers apartment; and a
"grand parlor, center hall and formal dining
room."
Greenwood, who refinished the floors on the parlor
level, and re-installed the original hardwood
front door, claims she designed each room
(complete with antique treasures to complement the
"contemporary furnishings") with the
spirit of the authors in mind.
Four suites, for example, are named after
prominent African American authors: Zora Neale
Hurston, Langston Hughes, Toni Morrison, and
Walter Mosely. Other suites are named after
"the favorite literary genres": Romance,
Poetry, Science Fiction, and Inspiration.
Patrik Henry Bass, the books editor for Essence
magazine who published a book called In Our Own
Image: Treasured African-American Traditions,
Journeys & Icons (Running Press 2001) that
he co-authored with Karen Pugh, says he fell in
love with The Langston Hughes Suite because
Langston is his favorite author.
"I actually became a writer in part because
of Langston Hughes," Bass said. "I used
to read his poetry when I was in elementary
school. I didn't know that there were any other
writers besides Langston Hughes." Bass
laughs, "But that was okay with me. Langston
Hughes was enough. You know? In many ways."
Alberta Gaskins, a self-titled "life-time
volunteer" for The National Congress of Black
Women, and Desiree Urquhart, Associate Executive
Director of the Arena Stage Theater in Washington,
D.C., absolutely adored The Zora Neale Hurston
Suite. Both women (like many in attendance) found
out about Akwaaba D.C. via email and
word-of-mouth.
"The reason why I particularly like this
room," Urquhart says, "is because two
years ago Arena Stage did a lost play of Zora's
called Polk County that we found in the archives
of The Library of Congress. Zora and I have a lot
in common in that we both like to live life out
loud and this room speaks to living out loud. It's
so big. It's Zora."
Urquart continues, talking about the significance
of the Inn being located in the heart of the
nation's capitol: "This is Washington, D.C.,
the center of power. And power not only stems from
one's ability to be able to orate, but also to be
able to write. Zora was a woman before her time
who seized power of her own through the pen. And
she loved people-exploring them anthropologically
and just giving us who we are in the dialect of
her time."
Urquart explains, "Being in this space today
in 2003, in Washington D.C., says 'Here is a place
where powerful people who know how to live out
loud can be here to relax; to create; to be all
they can be; right in the center of power.' I love
it."
Romance author, Donna Hill, was delighted by The
Romance Suite. During the day's festivities at
Akwaaba, she announced her recent engagement to
another writer, Robert Fleming. Hill says she was
"really surprised" after entering The
Romance Suite and discovering that the book her
fiancée edited called After Hours: A
Collection of Erotic Writing by Black Men (Plume
2002) was sitting on a bookshelf right above her
novel, If I Could (Kensington 2002).
"I thought that was really wonderful,"
Hill said with a smile.
Other authors showcased on The Romance Suite
bookshelf, which sits next to a beautiful
fireplace accentuated by rose petals and tall
white candles, included Colin Channer, Gwynne
Foster, Rochelle Allers, Francine Craft, Sheila
Copeland, Angela Weaver, and Kayla Perrin. Two
books from the Best Black Women's Erotica
series (Cleis Press), which were edited by Blanche
Richardson and Samiya Bashir, respectively, were
also on display.
Pamela Newkirk, author of A Love No less: More
than Two Centuries of African American Love
Letters (Doubleday 2003), was invited by
Greenwood to cut the ribbon in front of The
Romance Suite. Newkirk, who teaches journalism at
New York University, did a profile on Greenwood
"many years ago" that was featured in The
New York Times when Greenwood "opened her
first bed and breakfast in Bed-Stuy."
"[Akwaaba D.C.] underscores the richness of
the Black literary tradition," said Newkirk.
"This place will do so much to inspire the
next generation of writers."
Asha Bandele, a poet and author most remembered
for her beautiful memoir, The Prisoner's Wife
(Simon and Schuster 2000), is currently touring
the country with her new novel Daughters (Scribner's
2003). Bandele says, "Monique actually hired
me at Essence magazine years ago when she
was editor-in-chief. We had a very close
relationship and very close bond so she called and
asked me if I would come and cut the ribbon on the
poetry room."
Of course, Bandela said yes.
She also said, "I think [Akwaaba D.C.] is in
the tradition of all of the things that Monique
has been doing, which is reclaiming the Black
community and the best tradition of our elders and
ancestors; saying that we don't have to always go
to the white community to have the finer
things-the most beautiful things in life."
Bandela said, "[Monique] revitalized entire
neighborhoods in Brooklyn. And I have the feeling
that she'll do that here as well. There was a time
when we did, very much, run and control our own
stuff. And then a lot of that fell apart. But I
think Monique is part of those group of people
[who are] bringing it back together about Black
ownership and self-definition and
self-determination."
Bandele's quote echoes an earlier comment from
Patrik Bass, loyal friend and supporter of Monique
and Glenn, who explained, "I think this
[place] is incredible. It's groundbreaking. It's
the watershed moment because the Harlem
Renaissance was about community and I think that
this is the first step in terms of building
community. There is a great community, literary
community, in Washington, D.C. and now they have a
place-people from all around the world now have a
place-to come; African Americans and others who
want to find their voice; get renewed;
replenished; people who want to write; people who
love words."
Bass concludes, "[Akwaaba D.C.] doesn't have
to be about writers. It can be for book lovers,
too. I think that's the great thing about
literature is that it gives us a chance for
introspection."
Vanesse Lloyd-Sgambati, a literary publicist who
traveled all the way from Philadelphia, PA to
participate in the launching of Akwaaba says she
loves the bed and breakfast Inn because "it
is dedicated to a theme." She says, "A
uniqueness about this is that it's quality.
[Greenwood's] preserving architectural details,
but also keeping the integrity of all of the 'A'
level authors."
Lloyd-Sgambati, who (like Lonnae Parker of The
Washington Post) loves The Toni Morrison Suite
that it is decorated with African fabric and
designs, notes that Greenwood, herself an author
of book called Having What Matters: The Black
Woman's Guide to Creating the Life You Want (Amistad
Press 2002), is also supportive of "up and
coming authors."
Reginald Dunlop, a new client of Lloyd-Sgambati,
is a pilot for United Airlines who recently
self-published his first novel, Love Notes.
Like many authors in attendance who plan to give
book readings, signings, or workshops twice
monthly, free of charge, at the Inn's
"gracious parlor," Dunlop believes
Akwaaba D.C. provides an excellent opportunity for
those writers who need a place to write.
Room rates range from $135 to $190 and include
"an expanded gourmet continental breakfast
and afternoon refreshments."
Stanice Anderson, whose book I Say A Prayer For
Me: One Woman's Life of Faith and Triumph (Warner
Books/Walk Worthy Press 2003), is featured in The
Inspiration Suite (along with "natural body
products" made by an African American owned
company, Warm Spirit), confides, "To have
something right in this town is awesome. And right
at our disposal. This place is about books. There
are a lot of intellectuals here. There are a lot
of people who just like to read. So this is
perfect."
And Anderson is absolutely correct. Everything in
Akwaaba D.C. is "exquisitely done."
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Jamie Walker is a freelance writer and author 101
Ways Black Women Can Learn to Love Themselves: A
Gift for Women of All Ages (Xlibris 2002).
She is currently editing an anthology on her
mentor, Sonia Sanchez, which is called Sonia
On My Mind: A Collection of Scholarly Essays and
Literary Criticism, and can be reached through
her website www.jamiewalker.org
or jamiedwalker@yahoo.com.
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