Books
Two Funny Moms Get Real about the Goriness of Having a Baby
“There’s No Manual” informs without scaremongering and advises without judging
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Incinerating Injustice: Women Are Rightfully Furious Under Trump
All roads lead back to empathy.
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“All Boys Aren’t Blue” Offers Hope and Trust to Young Queer Black Readers
George M. Johnson has crafted an intimate community of Black queer readers.
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Intimate Access: Danez Smith on Poetry as Purpose, Thriving with HIV, and Blackness as Home
Blackness is everything to me.
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(No) Escape Zone: Two Authors Bring Us to Terms with Our Mortality
The more we’re encouraged to talk to one another about death, the less scary and anxiety-inducing it is.
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Power Lies: Sarah Kendzior on the America That Made Donald Trump Possible
“Anyone could have found the things I found, and could have put them together.”
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Immigration as Inspiration: Who Gets to Be an All-American Girl?
It’s very hard for people who are not immigrants to really understand what it’s like to move to a place where you don’t speak the language and how hard it is to find a home.
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Samantha Irby on “Wow, No Thank You” and Desanitizing Women’s Lives and Bodies
Samantha Irby will make you cringe as hard as you laugh.
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Love the Hard Way: Reflecting on the Magnificence of “The Bluest Eye”
“Ugliness,” one of the novel’s running themes, is examined under an unforgiving spotlight because it’s such a familiar experience for young Black girls.
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Laugh at My Pain: Finding the Humor in Being a “Black Widow”
Grief is a thing that will live, in some way, in our DNA and our body and be triggered by the wrong song or the wrong turn down the street where you see someone that looks like the person you lost.
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