Sascha Feinstein grew up on Manhattan's Upper West Side, the only child
of parents who were both artists. While he was still in high school, his
mother was diagnosed with cancer and died less than a year later. It was
during the trying period of his mother's illness that he became consumed
by jazz, both as an emotional salvation and as a necessary form of
escape. Later, during his college years, he discovered the crossovers
between jazz and poetry, and a life's love was forged. Feinstein's
passion for the creative arts and his fragmented memories of the
heartbreaking loss of his mother entwined to become the book Black
Pearls. In the spirit of jazz improvisation, these gentle, evocative
essays are governed by theme and variation more than by strict
chronology, each essay repositioning riffs and choruses of personal
experience within the broader cultural landscapes of literature,
painting, and music. Although the project began as an exploration into
the archeological nature of lost memory, it matured into a far more
expansive understanding of personal identity.