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How to Live Free in a Dangerous World
How to Live Free in a Dangerous World: A Decolonial Memoir | Shayla Lawson
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“Phenomenal.... A memoir that opens into the world, with brilliance, courage, and elegant prose.... This is a book to read, read again, and remember.”—Imani Perry, New York Times bestselling author of the National Book Award winner South to America Poet and journalist Shayla Lawson follows their National Book Critics Circle finalist This Is Major with these daring and exquisitely crafted essays, where Lawson journeys across the globe, finds beauty in tumultuous times, and powerfully disrupts the constraints of race, gender, and disability. In their new book, Shayla Lawson reveals how traveling can itself be a political act, when it can be a dangerous world to be Black, femme, nonbinary, and disabled. With their signature prose, at turns bold, muscular, and luminous, Shayla Lawson travels the world to explore deeper meanings held within love, time, and the self. Through encounters with a gorgeous gondolier in Venice, an ex-husband in the Netherlands, and a lost love on New Year’s Eve in Mexico City, Lawson’s travels bring unexpected wisdom about life in and out of love. They learn the strength of friendships and the dangers of beauty during a narrow escape in Egypt. They examine Blackness in post-dictatorship Zimbabwe, then take us on a secretive tour of Black freedom movements in Portugal. Through a deeply insightful journey, Lawson leads readers from a castle in France to a hula hoop competition in Jamaica to a traditional theater in Tokyo to a Prince concert in Minnesota and, finally, to finding liberation on a beach in Bermuda, exploring each location—and their deepest emotions—to the fullest. In the end, they discover how the trials of marriage, grief, and missed connections can lead to self-transformation and unimagined new freedoms.
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CaliforniaCay
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I've been trying to find good "travel memoirs" all year and kept getting disappointed. THIS BOOK HIT THE SPOT! She doesn't just talk about the places she's been to as a tourist, but makes personal connections to each place that I felt lacked in the other travel memoirs. I recommend the audio to hear the depth and emotion as the author transports you to Amsterdam, Venice, Cairo, Kyoto, Shanghai, Lisbon, Mexico City, Venice, and Bermuda. Inspiring!

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xicanti
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This week‘s library haul, which I picked up just ahead of another big rain. (I like rain, but I like it MORE when it happens outside the times when I wanna go cycling.) I got a bunch of comics for Gay May, plus an experimental novel and the tagged memoir. The Asian Heritage Month display called to me, too, and I chose one cookbook to take away. #gaymay