

And, although a quick read, the message lingers long after that we, as humans, still have a long way to go. While probably targeted for young readers, teens and adults will also appreciate this quiet treasure. This martyrs wreath, woven from a little-known but sophisticated form of poetry, challenges us to speak out against modern-day injustices-to speak what we see. Nelson’s style lends a power that makes mere storytelling inadequate. Award-winning poet Marilyn Nelson reminds us of the boy whose fate helped spark the civil rights movement. Everything is said with sorrow, with love, and with heart-felt apology. In this sonnet, A Wreath for Emmett Till, award-winning poet Marilyn Nelson speaks for the young man who could not speak for himself and for his brave mother, thrust into the spotlight after his killing. If the law would not prosecute those responsible, she would do it in her own way. His mother, Mamie, who lost her husband 10 years before in a controversial hanging, courageously displayed her young son’s mutilated body in an open casket at his funeral. His killers were never brought to justice. For those unaware, Emmett Till was a 14 year old black boy who was lynched and murdered in 1955 for whistling at a white woman. I was quickly intrigued by her beautifully expressed story of Emmett Till. I happened upon the poetic prose of Marilyn Nelson completely by accident this morning on my local digital library site. The last couple of weeks have been a painful, shameful reminder of this. And while America represents the Land of the Free for some, it is still a land of hypocrisy, fear, and double standards for many.

Let us first define what a Janus face is: Among other things, Janus was the Roman god of duality. This country we love has a Janus face: one mouth speaks with a forked tongue, the other reads the Constitution.
