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The Fire This Time
The Fire This Time: A New Generation Speaks about Race | Jesmyn Ward
National Book Awardwinner Jesmyn Ward takes James Baldwins 1963 examination of race in America, The Fire Next Time, as a jumping off point for this groundbreaking collection of essays and poems about race from the most important voices of her generation and our time. In light of recent tragedies and widespread protests across the nation, The Progressive magazine republished one of its most famous pieces: James Baldwins 1962 Letter to My Nephew, which was later published in his landmark book, The Fire Next Time. Addressing his fifteen-year-old namesake on the one hundredth anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation, Baldwin wrote: You know and I know, that the country is celebrating one hundred years of freedom one hundred years too soon. Award-winning author Jesmyn Ward knows that Baldwins words ring as true as ever today. In response, she has gathered short essays, memoir, and a few essential poems to engage the question of race in the United States. And she has turned to some of her generations most original thinkers and writers to give voice to their concerns. The Fire This Time is divided into three parts that shine a light on the darkest corners of our history, wrestle with our current predicament, and envision a better future. Of the eighteen pieces, ten were written specifically for this volume. In the fifty-odd years since Baldwins essay was published, entire generations have dared everything and made significant progress. But the idea that we are living in the post-Civil Rights era, that we are a post-racial society is an inaccurate and harmful reflection of a truth the country must confront. Baldwins fire next time is now upon us, and it needs to be talked about. Contributors include Carol Anderson, Jericho Brown, Garnette Cadogan, Edwidge Danticat, Rachel Kaadzi Ghansah, Mitchell S. Jackson, Honoree Jeffers, Kima Jones, Kiese Laymon, Daniel Jose Older, Emily Raboteau, Claudia Rankine, Clint Smith, Natasha Trethewey, Wendy S. Walters, Isabel Wilkerson, and Kevin Young.
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Amandakay
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Pickpick

Envisioned as a response to The Fire Next Time, James Baldwin‘s groundbreaking 1963 essay collection, these contemporary writers reflect on the past, present, and future of race in America. We‘ve made significant progress in the fifty-odd years since Baldwin‘s essays were published, but America is a long and painful distance away from a “post-racial society”—a truth we must confront if we are to continue to work towards change.

+POWERFUL

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bell7
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Pickpick

I can see why this essay collection has been getting attention since its publication. The essays are topically very different from each other, but most reflect in some way on James Baldwin, race in America today, and in a sense it's a record of collective grief, responding protest, and looking forward with hope. An excellent collection that may just leave you fired up.

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bell7
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My weekend is all booked! And apparenly I'm seeing red ♥️

SamAnne I liked this collection a lot. The one misfire is the essay on Rachael Dolezal. So many inaccuracies and just not well written. Google Ijeoma Oluo‘s piece in The Stranger on The crazy story. 4y
bell7 @SamAnne the collection as a whole is excellent. I just finished the essay you reference last night, and it felt more like reading a series of impressions in no particular order than a super cohesive essay. I'll look up the piece by Ijeoma Oluo too - thanks for the tip! 4y
SamAnne @bell7 It's been awhile since I read it, but I remember really inexcusable factual errors--even maybe the city it happened in (my town, Spokane)? I don't understand why Oluo wasn't asked to adapt her The Stranger feature for the book instead. Although Oluo does say in her piece that she got tired of being asked to write about, comment on Rachel Dolezal. 4y
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SkeletonKey
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Current audiobook: moving right along to this title. Seemed only logical.

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Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick
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Pickpick

I will never know how it truly feels to be black in America but books like this certainly help me to better understand the struggles and feelings that black folks have day in and day out. Every one of these essays packs a punch and covers an aspect of black existence, past present, or future. Jesmyn Ward put together an impressive lineup of experiences and her introduction, and later her essay, set the stage.⬇️

Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick My standouts were Homegoing, AD by Kima Jones, Composite Pops by Mitchell S. Jackson, and Message to My Daughters by Edwidge Danticat.

Loosely an #AAM #AAMJW @Soubhiville
A #BookSpinBingo square @TheAromaofBooks
#Booked2021 #Spring #AnAntiRacismBook @4thHouseoftheLeft @BarbaratheBibliophage @Cinfhen
#Pop21 #ABookAboutASocialJusticeIssue
4y
Come-read-with-me Stacked! 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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Pickpick

Although this collection was a bit dated, it was published in 2016 and doesn‘t include recent events, I still found it a solid collection of essays and the perfect follow-up after reading Wilkerson‘s Caste. This essay collection was started as an update, inspired by James Baldwin‘s classic essay The Fire Next Time 1963, and sadly in 2021 we could continue on with the fire for humanity, equality, and justice still long denied and still burning. ⤵️

Riveted_Reader_Melissa Although it may have been a bit dated, I‘m glad #authoramonth with @Soubhiville pushed it up off of my to-read list and onto my reading list this month. It was great timing and now that I‘ve read a few of the contributors other works, I think I got even more out of this collection. (edited) 4y
kspenmoll Read this last year & enjoyed it. 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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🤯 She‘s right, but wow, I never thought of it that way.

wanderinglynn And an independent probe into America's policing has produced a report that the deadly police killings of Black Americans could amount to crimes against humanity. https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/2021/apr/26/us-police-killings-black-america... 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @wanderinglynn Thank you for that article. I‘m not at all surprised that they would, and maybe an outside investigation is exactly what we need to get our system reformed. 4y
GingerAntics 🤯🤯🤯 heart breaking. It seems so obvious once pointed out like that. How has this not been a discussion point? 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @GingerAntics Yes, that and the comparison of the number of police shooting verses the numbers of lynching per week both struck me...and they were in different essays! 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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This is from an essay by Claudia Rankine, it reminds me of The Gift of Fear that I read years ago, extreme fear and a sixth sense dangers can often come out as jokes and laughter. I‘ll tag both authors works in the comments if anyone is interested.

SqueakyChu The Gift of Fear was an excellent book. I took much of it to heart. That was a fairly long time ago, but what he said then still rings true today. 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa @SqueakyChu Yes, it still sticks with me too and comes to the foreground when I hear or read certain things. I should probably re-read it again now. 4y
SqueakyChu @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I actually once got an email from the author Gavin De Becker. He had been the security guard for the Beatle George Harrison. I sent him a message of condolence on Harrison‘s death because a note to Harrison would have been meaningless. De Becker graciously answered me because he had become good friends with Harrison during his time with him. I lost the note in a hacked email account, but I always appreciated that (cont.) 4y
SqueakyChu @Riveted_Reader_Melissa ...he took the time to write back to me. I also had asked him a few questions about his book and security which he also promptly answered. I really appreciated his responses. (edited) 4y
SqueakyChu @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I also have to read The Fire This Time because I‘ve been fascinated by the quotes you‘ve been posting. Thanks for sharing them. What an interesting book!! (edited) 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @SqueakyChu That‘s a great story, thank you so much for sharing it with me. That makes me thank even more highly of him as an author. 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @SqueakyChu It‘s a collection of essays, most written not long after the Dylann Roof shootings. But the contributors were all very good, and a few of their individual books are fabulous. One of them I recommend often 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @SqueakyChu The other one I just read and I know I‘ll be recommending a lot. 4y
SqueakyChu @Riveted_Reader_Melissa Stacked both of your recommendations. Thanks! 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @SqueakyChu You‘re very welcome! 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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This essay by Carol Anderson is great too! Both of her books were excellent!

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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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This contrast seems even more stark to me now as I watch politicians bend over backwards to compare Ferguson and the Capitol Insurrection. And somehow make BLM and anti-fi (anti-fascism) terrorist groups, but the Insurrectionists were good people protesting.🙄

Riveted_Reader_Melissa I should have noted, this essay is by Carol Anderson! 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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OMG Isabel Wilkerson‘s contribution to this book of essays is powerful!

Just in case anyone else is interested in this tidbit as we finish Wilkerson‘s Caste! #SheSaid

GingerAntics 🤯 that is shocking and sad... we really are going backwards 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa Did you see this quote too? @wanderinglynn 4y
wanderinglynn Horrific. 😢 4y
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BeckyWithTheGoodBooks
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Pickpick

Published 5 years ago, the poems and essays collected here could be written today with new names pasted in. Ward brings together many voices and subjects in this collection, but the harsh reality remains the same: systemic racism and its impact on Black Americans. If you wish to confront the truth, this timely and insightful collection is somewhere to begin. 4 ⭐️ #authoramonth

SamAnne I enjoyed this collection too. The only essay I thought poorly written & researched was the one on Rachel Dolezal who pretended to be black & was NAACP chapter President in my city. The author got so many facts wrong. Ijeoma Oluo wrote a great piece for the Seattle weekly The Stranger: https://www.thestranger.com/features/2017/04/19/25082450/the-heart-of-whiteness-... (edited) 4y
BeckyWithTheGoodBooks @SamAnne Thank you for the article link! I agree with you about that particular essay. I live in WA and remember more details about Dolezal than described in the essay. (edited) 4y
SamAnne @BeckyWithTheGoodBooks I live in Spokane and met her a couple times. Looking back, it‘s hard to imagine how she passed for so long. She now cuts hair not far from my neighborhood. I was a bit obsessed with the story TBH. 4y
BeckyWithTheGoodBooks @SamAnne Oh! How fascinating! I was also gobbling up this story as it was unfolding. 4y
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Riveted_Reader_Melissa
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My next Jesmyn Ward, and this seems like just the right pick after reading Caste with #SheSaid

GingerAntics I think that was the biggest culture shock when we moved from the north to the south. 4y
SamAnne I enjoyed this collection, but the essay on Rachel Dolezal was sloppy with many factual errors. When you get to that essay, I reccommend reading Ijeoma Oluo 's article: https://www.thestranger.com/features/2017/04/19/25082450/the-heart-of-whiteness-... 4y
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vlwelser
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Pickpick

This is amazing. It's a collection of essays and it uses the work of James Baldwin as sort of a loose inspiration. Jesmyn Ward is a magic unicorn in my opinion. But some of the other contributors are also pretty fantastic in their own right.

#AuthorAMonth with @Soubhiville

#BookSpinBingo free space
@TheAromaofBooks

kspenmoll This was wonderful! 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa I just started this one today! Great review! 4y
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vlwelser @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I love all of her books but this is especially good. For a multitude of reasons. I believe Isabel Wilkerson is one of the contributors. 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @vlwelser Yes, it seems like the perfect follow up after Caste. 4y
vlwelser @Riveted_Reader_Melissa I think Carol Anderson was in there too. I feel like we have touched on a lot of stuff in the last year and I'm looking forward to Homegoing. 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @vlwelser We‘ve collectively picked such a fabulous group of books so far...they‘ve all been excellent, overlapping and reinforcing each other a little and yet not repetitive. And this year #AuthorAMonth seems like it‘s meshing with a bunch of our books too, which is just the best serendipity. 4y
vlwelser @Riveted_Reader_Melissa the #AuthorAMonth selections have been excellent so far. It's a pretty diverse mix. I do sort of wish I was discovering new authors but I guess I have #SheSaid for that. Well Read Black Girl alone made my TBR explode. 4y
Riveted_Reader_Melissa @vlwelser Me too, and I‘m happy to see some of those same authors show up in AuthorAMonth, gives me an excuse to pick up other things from their back catalog that I‘ve been meaning to read forever, but just haven‘t gotten to yet. I think there were a few authors I have not read before, coming up later in the year. 4y
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Skygoddess1
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I really enjoyed this collection of essays by various authors about race and being Black in America. There were many instances in which I found myself nodding along in agreement with what was being said. An important read for sure. #AuthorAMonth #BookSpinBingo

Linsy Agree! Great read ❤ 4y
TheAromaofBooks Great progress!! 4y
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BeckyWithTheGoodBooks
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My ambitious TBR pile for the remainder of the month! Hoping I have time for my #doublespin book (A Little Life) after finishing my #authorofthemonth and #bookspin selections! 🤞🏻

Soubhiville I love Watership Down! And I hope you‘ll enjoy reading Jesmyn Ward. 😊 4y
TheAromaofBooks Woohoo!! Good luck!! 4y
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Q84
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Just finished this one.
#AuthorAMonth @Soubhiville

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CuriousG
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I'm posting one book per day from the ever growing unread stacks in my personal library. No description or explanation, just books I own and plan to read. #tbr

Day 5

Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks I love her ❤️ 4y
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Nitpickyabouttrains
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Pickpick

A look at baldwins legacy.

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Susanita
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Day 6 of #12booksof2020 brings us to June when I think many of us ramped up our anti-racist reading. Tagged book was interesting and thought provoking. I‘m only sorry I didn‘t read the Baldwin first, as I think it would have given some good context. *shakes fist at the bad timing of Libby holds*

MrBook It sure did ramp up! I had over 75 books get borrowed from my Black Experience Display at the library in the four months we were open to the public. 🙂 4y
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kspenmoll
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#day1 #12Booksof2020
A mesmerizing, thought provoking collection of essays, poems, short narratives. Her title alludes to James Baldwins‘ collection of essays, The Fire Next Time (1963).
On the first day of Christmas my true love gave to me a partridge in a pear tree... and Jesmyn.

Andrew65 Great choice, brilliant author. 4y
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MsLeah8417
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Pickpick

⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️

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MsLeah8417
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Melismatic
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Pickpick

A compilation of essays that are a modern continuation of James Baldwin‘s original, inspired following Ferguson and the prevalence of #BLM protests as America faced a Trump presidency.

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brandierickson
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This book is generally divided into stories of the past, present, and future of being Black in America. I just finished the “past” section and it was surprisingly uplifting. Nowhere to go but up.

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Libby1
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An excellent meme from today‘s For Reading Addicts‘ Facebook page.

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Libby1
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Do yourself a favour and search for Jesmyn Ward‘s article in yesterday‘s Vanity Fair. 💔

I want to be a witness.

(I‘m sorry I‘m a technological dotard or else I‘d know how to share the link)

Update - the lovely @Anna40 has shared the link in the comments below. I promise this is worth your time.

Anna40 I shared the link above, I hope it works! I didn't know that Jesmyn Ward's husband died. A powerful piece. 4y
Libby1 Thanks, @Anna40 . That‘s really helpful. I was reading the author‘s biography and was stunned to see that her 33 year old husband had died of Covid 19 earlier this year. 💔 4y
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kspenmoll
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Suet624 Just awful. 4y
eri.reads This is a perfect statement of how it feels every time my sons and my hubby leave the house without me. Truly nerve-racking. I'm extremely grateful that the world is beginning to understand, but so sad for the many lives already lost and families already hurting. 💜 4y
kspenmoll @eri.reads No adequate words. I am so so sad that you & so many live with fear/grief daily. ❤️ 4y
Libby1 @eri.reads 💜 4y
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kspenmoll
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#campariandbooks #porchlife #sunset #integrateyourshelf

Relaxing on the porch sipping Campari & soda, reading this fabulous collection of poems and essays.

BarbaraBB That looks perfect 👌 4y
Hooked_on_books I love this book and I love your porch! 4y
kspenmoll @BarbaraBB It felt perfect! 4y
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kspenmoll
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#integrateyourshelf #racism #equity #courageousconversations

Just starting this while my husband is driving us to Noank CT on the shoreline for our annual family lobster fest. 🦞

Linsy Such a good book!!! 4y
SamAnne I'm a huge Jessmyn fan & there are so many great pieces in this collection--except for the essay on Rachael Dolezal. Lazy research--he didn't even get the city she lived in right. It is a rich story with a lot to discuss & that essay fell flat for me. Google Ijeomo Uluo's article in The Stranger instead. It is brilliant, although her description of Spokane is a bit unfair--Portland has as large of a racist element, sadly, as Spokane. 4y
kspenmoll @SamAnne Thank you so much for the heads up! I will do as you suggest. Really appreciate your input!!‘ 4y
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SamAnne @kspenmoll I was a little obsessed with the Dolezal story. Met her briefly a couple of times. She was a white woman from MT who represented herself as Black, got elected president of the Spokane NAACP. How? What was the collective denial and silence going on? In retrospect she was so clearly a white woman with dreads and a spray tan. Grew up in a conservative Christian family with Black adopted brothers. So many levels of crazy to unpack. 4y
kspenmoll @SamAnne I remember reading the news reports when she came undone. Not there yet in the book but will read essay today. 4y
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danimgill
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Pickpick

This was a really solid and compelling collection of personal essays on race in America. Written four years ago but unfortunately every bit as relevant today.

heikemarie Anything Jesmyn Ward is involved with I will read. 4y
Bklover I love that fan!!!!!!!!!!💜💜💜 4y
37 likes2 comments
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LatrelWhite
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❤️Jesmyn Ward

SamAnne Just finished this one! 4y
LatrelWhite ⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️⭐️ love Jesmyn Ward this book featured some of my favorite authors and some new favs! 4y
Alwaysbeenaloverofbooks I love her!! 4y
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SamAnne
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Mehso-so

I‘m a huge Jesmyn Ward fan and a new James Baldwin fan. I wanted to like this collection more. A few pieces are great, some are good, others just not. Was particularly disappointed in an essay in part on Rachael Dolezal (google her) since she is from my city. But the essayist didn‘t even get her basic info right. A bummer, because it is a story rich for commentary.

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Andrea313
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I normally re-read the original Harry Potter series each July, but I am really not feeling Jo Rowling and her transphobic BS right now. So instead I'm committing to reading/re-reading seven books on anti-racism in its place. #JulyTBR #FlyHighJuly
@Eggs

Eggs Great stack 📚👏🏻 4y
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Bookalong
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Pickpick

5🌟 Thought provoking and eye opening. Ward has curating a book about race in America today, bringing together several great Black writers to share their personal stories and poems with purpose and sentiment. It offers a glimpse through their eyes and thoes of their parents and grandparents experiences of race in America. I learned so much about Black identity and the urgency for anti-racism in the world today. #bookreview #bookstagram #amreading

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Susanita
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1. Thoughtful and powerful collection of essays about the experience of being Black in America.
2. Crossover Scottish islands mystery where Fin Macleod and Jimmy Perez have to work together to solve a murder. Along the way they get into at least one fistfight.
3. I prefer one POV but multiple POVs work if done well. Example in the comments.
#wondrouswednesday

Eggs Jimmy Perez ❣️❣️❣️ ***sigh 4y
Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick Where would I find this Jimmy Perez character? 4y
Susanita @Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick He hangs out in the Shetland islands and in a book series by Ann Cleeves. Also a TV series! 4y
Kelly_the_Bookish_Sidekick I may have to find him if he's making the ladies swoon over here. 😁 4y
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Susanita
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Happy solstice! So many books! So little time!

I have to do housework today but will be taking breaks to read and ponder essays from the tagged book.

#bookreport

Cinfhen Nice report!!! I like all your subcategories 😃💜🤣 5y
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mcbeth528
Pickpick

I don‘t usually enjoy collections of essays, but this was very powerful; listening to it on an audio made it even more real. Several of the essays really hit me, and possibly because it was near the end, but possibly because it was just such a statement with what 2020 is, but the idea that our Black population could easily be eligible for refugee status WITHIN OUR OWN BORDERS really hit me. Highly recommend.

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ErinC
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“Lonely in America” By Wendy S. Walters. Wow. #BlackLivesMatter

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rachelk
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jveezer
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James Baldwin speaking a reader‘s truth: “ You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read.”

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derr.liz
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"We seem to be in a continuing feedback loop of repeating a past that our country has yet to address. Our history is one of spectacular achievement... followed by a violent backlash that threatens to erase the gains and then a long, slow climb to the next mountain, where the cycle begins again."

#blackhistorymonth

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jveezer
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“Maybe I come from where the sidewalk / ends, or maybe I just read that in a book once. / It can be hard to tell the difference sometimes.”

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ephemeralwaltz
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Pickpick

I'm so very glad I read this. Coming from different backgrounds and delving into different literary genres, the authors in this compilation give eye-opening personal accounts of their experience regarding race and their thoughts on how to confront what a future America might look like. I especially enjoyed contributions by Carol Anderson, Jesmyn Ward, Garnette Cadogan, Claudia Rankine, Daniel José Older and Kevin Young. A superb collection.

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Christine
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Pickpick

This is a powerful collection featuring a diverse group of authors and perspectives that coalesce beautifully around the theme of race in America. I‘d already encountered many of these pieces elsewhere, but plenty were new to me and prompted additions to my must-read author list. And now I‘m even more eager to read the two Ward titles I haven‘t yet, and to finally read James Baldwin.

KT1432 Baldwin's The Fire Next Time is absolutely excellent. My favorite of his I've read so far. 5y
CaitlinR Jesmyn Ward is a brilliant writer, and this collection blew me away. Wouldn‘t it be fascinating to read both the Baldwin and Ward‘s collection together in a book club? 5y
Christine @lele1432 I think I will try to read that this month! ❤️ 5y
Christine @CaitlinR She really is. And YES, it would be! 5y
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rsteve388
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Pickpick

I have had this book on my TBR for a long time. I wanted to read The Fire Next Time by James Baldwin and This collection of essays together in one sitting but wasn't able to do so. However there is no doubt that both books ask the question What is America to Black Folks? This is an important excellent challenging read for white people who want to do the work of anti Racism.