TRANSPLANT: A Memoir is a page-turning, personal journey into one Black woman's battle with kidney disease and the American medical system. Bernardine Watson's book is at once a truth-telling and an affirmation of the life force propelling us all toward love and hope. A vibrant, powerful portrait of what it means to be Black, female, and confronting a deadly disease in today's America. TRANSPLANT: A Memoir has been honored as one of the '5 over 50' debuts of 2023 by Poets & Writers Magazine and is the winner of the 2023 Nonfiction Prize from the Washington Writers' Publishing House.
Autorentext
Bernardine (Dine) Watson, winner of the 2023 Washington Writers' Publishing House nonfiction award for Transplant, A Memoir, is a nonfiction writer and poet, originally from Philadelphia, but who now lives in Washington, DC. She has written on social policy issues for numerous major foundations, nonprofit organizations, and for The Washington Post Health and Science section and She the People blog. Her poetry has been published in numerous journals and anthologies, including Beltway Poetry Quarterly, Rising Voices/ University Professors Press, Sanctuary/ Darkhouse Books, and The Great World of Days/ Day Eight Arts. Dine is a member of the 2015 class of the DC Commission on Arts and Humanities Poet in Progress Program and was selected to participate in the 2017 and 2018 classes of the Hurston Wright Foundation's Summer Writers' Workshop for Poetry. She is a member of Day Eight Art's Board of Directors.