Much of First Light is autobiographical, a young boy growing into urban
manhood; it's a book of family, of strangers, of learning to tell time
by the people that populated E. Ethelbert Miller's life. He has
populated his work with mothers, fathers, brothers, sisters and lovers
who fight daily to be able to do simple things like drink clean water
and sleep without gunshots interrupting their dreams. He takes
instruction from Pablo Neruda, Margaret Walker, political prisoners and
finds inspiration in the aloneness of Winnie Mandela. Mostly, it is a
book of love, personal and cultural. It's silences are penetrating, its
insights are liberating, its violence is quieting and its love is
contagious.