Reading “The Other Black Girl” By Zakiya Dalilan Harris

I started reading The Other Black Girl by Zakiya Dalilan Harris (2021). The prologue opens in 1983, so I am curious how that relates to the current action in the book set to 2018. Good lead in hook. Engaging opening. Suspenseful. Things to follow: the symbolism in Black hair.

Part I: Goes with the title. Building anticipation for the other Black girl. In society the other Black girl in predominately White spaces is a major theme in Black girls’ and women’s lives. Things to follow: “Very Specific People” – who are they?

Protagonist: Nella

Chapter 2 – I hear Jordan Peele soundtrack in anticipation lol. I get creepy vibes from the back cover summary and the opening quote about how Black history is horror. Things to follow: Black Female Experiences

Stay tuned! Join me in reading books by Black authors!
–Ceci




Spotlight on a Black Woman Writer: Jenee Osterheldt

Jenee Osterheldt, a Boston Globe writer has debuted a new series called “A Beautiful Resistance, which examines Black lives and Black joy beyond just sharing Black hardships.

A Beautiful Resistance (bostonglobe.com)

Jeneé Osterheldt – Culture Columnist – The Boston Globe

Twitter: (20) Jeneé Osterheldt (@SincerelyJenee) / Twitter

New Book Alert: Black Girl Civics: Expanding and Navigating the Boundaries of Civic Engagement

Exciting news for me and my daughter! We co-wrote a book chapter in the following book (flyer pictured). Our chapter is titled “A Tale of Two Black Girl Civic Identities: A Mother/Daughter Critical Autoethnograpy on Language, Literacy, and the Black Lves Matter Movement”

Click here for ordering details on the publisher’s website.

Also available on Amazon in paperpack or hardcover.

Response to “Chapter One: The Afterlife of Pathogens”

In the introduction to this chapter of Caste: The Origins of Our Discontents, Isabel Wilkerson compares anthrax to the poisonous hatred that has run rampant throughout our society in recent years. I believe, like many others, the election of the first Black president, Barack Obama, ripped the bandage off of the hidden-under-a-rock (or behind a white sheet) racism and race hatred of the faux postracial society of the 1990s. She writes that “The anthrax, like the reactivation of the human pathogens of hatred and tribalism in this evolving century, had never died. It lay in wait, sleeping, until extreme circumstances brought it to the surface and back to life” (p. 3). She mentions that even though many of us do not want to believe it, America has always been this way even though we feign ignorance and pretend not to recognize it. I say, some of us pretend because our privilege allows us to; others of us pretend so that we can put one foot in front of the other in our daily walk among the minoritized populations who have to keep on keeping on in spite of the collective, cultural trauma of our present circumstances and histories.

Wilkerson goes on to summarize the presidential contest between Hillary Clinton and Donald Trump, although she does not call them out by name, instead providing easily recognizable details and character traits.

This blog post is part of a series of personal reading responses to contemporary and traditional literature written by Black fiction and nonfiction authors.

“On the Come Up” by Angie Thomas

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Part One: Old School
Chapter 1
I am so excited to be reading Angie Thomas’ follow up novel to The Hate U Give. It is so refreshing reading books with characters that look like me and my people. From the opening page, Thomas is drawing me in with details like a teacher who wears her hair in Sisterlocks (Mrs. Murray) and is reading the great poet Nikki Giovanni.

The protagonist is a high school junior named Brianna Jackson (Bri or Breezy). Her father was murdered 12 years ago. Her mother was a recovering drug addict, eight years sober. She lives in Garden Heights like Starr did. Brianna’s dad was a rapper, “Lawless, the underground rap legend” (p. 9)

Book Club Question:

  • When Mrs. Murray confronts Brianna after class about her grades slipping, Brianna admits she wants to be a rapper. She proclaims that college is not for everyone despite having aspirations to go to college.
  • What do you think? Agree or disagre? Why or why not?
  • What are your plans after high school?

Nic Stone

Nic Stone is an African-American, best-selling African-American young adult (YA) author, who was born in Atlanta, Georgia.

Born: July 10, 1985

Author’s Website: http://www.nicstone.info/            

Twitter: https://twitter.com/getnicced

Nic Stone’s Books and Other Works