Stamped: Racism, Anti-racism, and You by Jason Reynolds and Ibram X. Kendi
Published: March 10th, 2020 by Little, Brown Books for Young Readers
Genre: Young Adult, History, Non-fiction
Format: Hardcover, 294 Pages, Own
Rating: 4.5 stars
My Thoughts:
Jason Reynolds adapted Ibram X. Kendi's award-winning history book Stamped from the Beginning into a book for young adults. That book is almost 600 pages! So that's quite the condensing. Reynolds turns it into more of a dialogue about history and race and how it's all connected. Black history is American history. My son was probably a little too young for some of it since he didn't quite get some of the references. And the book came off very sarcastic--which makes sense if you're talking to someone face to face. That style will work most of the time but sometimes it felt a bit off. But I think it's an excellent book to start to understand, especially for young people, America's true history. There are lots of references and other sites to check out in the back. I'm also still working through Kendi's history book. Gabe and me had some excellent discussions. America needs to change how it teaches and discusses and talks about our history. We can't know how we got here if we don't truly understand what has happened.
Giovanni's Room by James Baldwin
Published: 1956
Genre: Modern Classic
Format: Kindle, 178 Pages, Own
Rating: 4 stars
My Thoughts:
Baldwin writes a beautiful and thoughtful novel on what it means to be gay and black in a world that doesn't really accept either, and especially not together. Giovanni's room haunts him and as us. Paris has never felt more sad or closed and encroaching than in this story.
"And these nights were being acted out under a foreign sky, with on one to watch, no penalties attached--it was this last fact which was our undoing, for nothing is more unbearable, once one has it, than freedom."
"Their decisions are not really decisions at all--a real decision makes one humble, one knows that it is at the mercy of more things than can be named--but elaborate systems of evasion, of illusion, designed to make themselves and the world appear to be what they and the world are not."
The Mothers by Brit Bennett
Published: October 11th, 2016 by Riverhead Books
Genre: Literary Fiction
Format: Hardcover, 288 Pages, Library
Rating: 4 stars
My Thoughts:
We follow Nadia Turner from high school as she loses her mother to suicide and the consequences that follow. The themes throughout are about motherhood and what it means to choose or not choose to be a mother. We learn more about Nadia's mother and what made her tick. How her life changed when she became pregnant with Nadia. What if she hadn't kept her? Where would her mother be?
It's a short but powerful story. I look forward to her next one.
"...Upper Room had encircled the wailing mother and held her up, soundlessly, because hard deaths resist words. A soft death can be swallowed with Called home to be with the Lord or We'll see her again in glory, but hard deaths get caught in the teeth like gristle."
"We see the span of her life unspooling in colorful threads and we chase it, wrapping it around our hands as more tumbles out. She's her mother's age now. Double her age. Our age You're our mother. We're climbing inside of you."
A Kid's Guide to Native American History: More Than 50 Activities by Yvonne Wakim Dennis
Published: November 1st, 2009 by Chicago Review Press
Genre: Juvenile, Non-fiction, History
Format: Kindle, 256 Pages, Own
Rating: 4 stars
My Thoughts:
I read this out loud with Gabe. We've been diving into history together and this one talks about each Nation in the Americas. Culture, history, famous people. There are activities to do at the end of each chapter and lots of resources to learn more. I thought it was an excellent introduction to Native American history which is also American history.
Morning Girl by Michael Dorris
Published: 1990
Genre: Juvenile, Historical Fiction
Format: Paperback, 80 Pages, Own
Rating: 4 stars
My Thoughts:
Dorris does a fantastic job of letting us experience Morning Girl, Star Boy, and their people on the Caribbean Islands before Columbus arrived and murdered them all. Gabe and I were both sad to learn about Michael Dorris' life. He died a few years after he wrote this book.
No Cats Allowed by Miranda James
Published: February 23rd, 2016 by Berkley
Genre: Cozy Mystery
Format: Paperback, 275 Pages, Own
Rating: 2 stars
My Thoughts:
I shouldn't be too hard on it but it was one of the more poorly written cozy mysteries I've read in awhile. This is number 7 in the series and I haven't read any others. But like a good cozy, you don't need to. The author catches us up on anything we need to know in various ways. The mystery is OK, nothing out of the ordinary. But I didn't like the protagonist. He's a do-gooder with no personality. His kids have no personalities. And it takes place in the south with some benevolent racism thrown in. Meh. Plus the cover has a tabby cat but his cat is a Maine Coon cat so false advertising. Even his girlfriend was someone he only talked to over the phone and it's all very chaste. I know there is an audience for super clean cozy mysteries, but I am not that audience. I got this as a gift so I just wanted to read something easy peasie. It wasn't good but it was OK.
The Oracle Code by Marieke Nijkamp
Published: March 10th, 2020 by DC Comics
Genre: Young Adult, Graphic Novel, Mystery
Format: Paperback, 208 Pages, Librart
Rating: 4 stars
My Thoughts:
I really enjoyed this one. It takes place in Batman's world. Commissioner Gordon's daughter is the ultimate hacker until one night she gets shot and her world changes forever. She ends up in a rehabilitation center where she hears voices in the walls and patients disappear overnight. It's a compelling mystery and it looks like the story will continue in more comics.
I liked the writing in The Mothers ... though the betrayal towards the end of the story sort of confounded me a long with the continually bad choices the three main characters make. Still the unwanted teen pregnancy plot kept me tangled up in their lives. I plan to read her second novel this fall.
ReplyDeleteI thought the same thing with the Mothers but I try to stick with books especially when the main characters aren't as likable as I want them to be. I'm looking forward to the Vanishing Half.
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