Welcome to Love's Troubadours, a
Lorraine Hansberry-inspired novel series about people learning and living as they love.Ananda
Kiamsha Madelyn Leeke (www.anandaleeke.com) is the author of the series. Click here to find out how it was made: www.lovestroubadours.com/id7.html.
The first book in the Love's Troubadours'
series is entitled Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One (iUniverse,
Inc. - August 2007). It tells the story of Karma Francois, a thirtysomething Oakland-born BoHo B.A.P.
(Bohemian Black American Princess) with Louisiana roots and urban debutante flair. The novel begins with Karma's
life in an uproar. Her relationships and the museum curator career that she struggled to form in New York City have crumbled,
leaving no viable options to rebuild. Relocating to Washington, DC, Karma struggles with denial, depression, and debt.
A lack of full-time employment opportunities forces her to craft a gypsy existence as a Jill of Many Trades: yoga teacher,
art consultant, and freelance curator at Howard University Gallery of Art. Unable and unwilling to appreciate these jobs as
gifts, she wallows in a pool of lost identity-and doesn't see a way to keep from drowning. When she looks in the mirror, Karma sees a woman whose choices have dishonored her true character.
Now, for the first time in her life, Karma must learn to see herself for who she really is.
Love's
Troubadours - Karma: Book One is available on Amazon.com for $20.95. To purchase a copy, click on the link below.
Join my Facebook Fan Page and visit www.anandaleeke.com.
Blessings All,
While I rest my social media butterfly wings and complete
my poetic memoir in the next three months, I invite you to join my Facebook fan page - www.facebook.com/pages/Ananda-Leeke/68996700906. Also, check out my official web site - www.anandaleeke.com. It will launch in June 2009.
Ananda is on a blogging break for next 3 months. A short monthly site update & regularly scheduled radio shows will be offered
each month.
Blessings All,
I am pausing my to
do list for the next three months so I can practice self-care and have fun while publishing my poetic memoir. Unfortunately,
I will not be able to actively blog and reach out to you wonderful people on a regular basis. I will probably return
to my regular blogging schedule in late May. In the meantime, keep sending me positive energy for the publication of my poetic
memoir. Thank you in advance. Know that I am doing the same for you and your creative efforts.
Peace, Gratitude,
Love, Laughter, Joie de Vivre (joy of living), and Creativity,
Happy Love Day Every Day! What does love look like in your life?
Fortune Cookie Collage #2 by Ananda Leeke
Happy Love Day Every Day!
Did you celebrate Valentine's Day? If yes, what did you
do? If not, why?
I think that Valentine's Day is just one more opportunity for us to give and receive more
love in our lives. This year I shared my Valentine's Day with a group of fabulous women at the Sacred Circles' women's
spirituality conference held at the Washington National Cathedral. On Saturday morning, I facilitated "What Does Love
Look Like In Your Life?," a juicy workshop that used contemplative practices, collage, and journaling to show women how
to bring love into every action of their daily lives. For more information, visit www.nationalcathedral.org/learn/sacredCircles.shtml.
I created the workshop based on my debut novel,
Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One (www.lovestroubadours.com). It tells the story of Karma Francois, a thirtysomething
California-born BoHo BAP (Bohemian Black American Princess) with Louisiana roots and urban debutante flair. The book shows
how a woman uses therapy, yoga, meditation, art, music, poetry, and support from family and friends to confront the effects
of her poor life choices and embrace a spiritual journey of healing and love. The book is available on www.amazon.com.
As a special Love Day treat, I included several
journaling exercises that I shared with my Sacred Circles workshop participants below. Take some time to read them. Journal
about them. Perhaps they might lead you to write a blog. Feel free to share. I'd love to hear what your thinking and feeling.
Enjoy!
Be love, love light, and live as the spirit of life,
Ananda
What Does Love Look Like In Your Life Journaling
Exercises (with fortune cookie collages) Copyright 2009 by Madelyn C. Leeke
Excerpt from That
Which Awakens Me by Ananda Leeke (iUniverse, Inc. - Spring 2009)
1) Take four deep breaths. Place your right
hand on your heart. Invite yourself to open your heart to who you are in the present moment. Ask your higher self for six
words that describe your current self. These words will become your six-word memoir for the present moment.
2) Explore the fortune cookie collage above. Select four wisdom messages that you are drawn to. What are these wisdom messages
telling your soul about love in your life?
3) Click here and watch a YouTube video featuring my poem "What
Does Love Look Like in Your Life?" (from Love's Troubadours - Karma: Book One): http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yB0iKT7pEs.
a. What color is love in your life?
b. What does love look life in your life?
c. Select six words from your journal exercise that mean the most to
you.
d. How can each word remind you to bring more love into your daily life?
Has Artist/Author Ananda Leeke's work made a difference
in your life this year? If yes, then click on the PayPal button above
and make a donation to Kiamsha.com, LLC, Leeke's healing arts company. PayPal offers Visa, MasterCard, and American Express
secured payment options.It also offers a PayPal card that you can use for other purchases. Many thanks
in advance for your gift. It is greatly appreciated!
Kiamsha.com, LLC promotes creativity through coaching
and expressive arts, teaches contemplative practices (i.e. yoga, Reiki healing touch, meditation, breathing exercises, journaling,
affirmations, and prayer), and builds community that awakens your soul and transforms your life.
AKOMA is a Ghanaian Andinkra symbol that represents the heart and
means keep an open heart filled with compassion.
"Love is patient, love is kind. It does not envy, it does not boast, it is not proud It
is not rude, it is not self-seeking, it is not easily angered, it keeps no record of wrongs. Love does not delight in evil,
but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always hopes, always perseveres. Love never fails."
1 Corinthians 13:4-8
WHAT IS LOVE'S
TROUBADOURS?
Love's Troubadoursis a healing fiction series that features stories told by people who are learning and living as they
love. The healing fiction series is deeply rooted in the storytelling traditions of the West African griot and troubadours
of the French Middle Ages. To learn more about these traditions, read the sections below.
Senegalese Griot, 1890
WHAT IS A GRIOT?
A griot is a West African poet, storyteller, historian, advisor, arbitrator, and wandering musician
who serves as a repository of oral history tradition. Griots are walking history books who memorize traditional songs
and teachings, folktales, cultural history, and family relationships. This information is passed down through generations. Griots
also marry them with current events and chance incidents to create praise songs and stories with wisdom teachings, comic relief
and satire, political commentary, and gossip. Today, griots live in Senegal, Mali, Gambia, and Guinea. They are present among
the Wolof, Serer, Mande, Malinke, Bambara, Fula, Tukuloor, Wolof, and Mauritanian people. There are several African names
for griots including jeli (a word that means "blood in the Manika language that is derived from ; northern Mande areas),
jali (southern Mande areas), guewel (Wolof), gawlo (Pulaar, a Fula language), and igiiw (Hassaniyya, an Arabic language).
WHAT IS A TROUBADOUR?
Troubadour is derived from an Old French word "trobador" which comes
from the verb "trobar" that means to invent or compose. When you put it all together, troubadour refers to a composer
and performer of lyric poetry. The French Middle Ages (1100-1350) gave birth to the troubadour tradition in the eleventh century.
The tradition defined troubadour lyric as poetical, rhetorical, and musical fiction. They dealt mainly with themes of courtly
love, chivalry, nature, life, and death. Most troubadour lyrics were metaphysical, intellectual, and formulaic. They also
included many genres including alba (morning song - the song of a lover as dawn approaches, often with a watchman warning
of the approach of a lady's jealous husband), canso or canço (the love song, usually consisting of five or six
stanzas), dansa or balada (a dance song with a refrain) ensenhamen (a long didactic poem, usually not divided into stanzas,
teaching a moral or practical lesson), enuig (a poem expressing indignation or feelings of insult), escondig (a lover's
apology), partimen (a poetical exchange between two or more poets in which one is presented with a dilemma by another and
responds), planh (a lament, especially on the death of some important figure), salut d'amor (a love letter addressed to
another, not always one's lover), and tenso (a poetical debate which was usually an exchange between two poets, but could
be fictional).
ODO NNYEW FIE KWAN is a Ghanaian Andinkra symbol that means the power of love.
Copyright 2009-2012 by Madelyn C. Leeke. All rights reserved.
The
slogans "Love's Troubadours"; "Be love, love light, and live as the spirit of life"; "YOGA is Your
Opportunity to Graciously Accept yourself"; "Honey I'm OM"; "OM on My Mind"; "Our Womanist Spirit";
"BAP Living"; "Black American Princess...BAP Being At Peace"; "Sisterhood, the Blog"; “Ananda
Leeke TV”; “The Ananda Leeke Radio Show”; and "That Which Awakens Me" are the intellectual property of
Kiamsha.com, LLC. They may not be used without the prior consent or licensing by Kiamsha.com, LLC.