Commentary: Love After the End: An Anthology of Two-Spirit & Indigiqueer Speculative Fiction

Love After the End is a collection of nine short speculative fiction stories written by Indigenous, queer, and Two-Spirit writers and storytellers. The question explored in each story is, as Joshua Whitehead tells us in his introduction, “What does it mean to be Two-Spirit during the apocalypse?”

Read More
What's Chava Possum Up to Today?

This week I published a sneak peek at a brand new fictional serial called The Bellview Lunch Lady Rebellion, about how four lunch ladies' plan to rid the school of its army recruitment officer turns into a community-care revolution. Follow the story and learn more about army recruitment in our schools @lunchrebellion on Twitter.

Read More
Commentary: The Bad Muslim Discount by Syed Masood

Masood’s novel follows two immigrant families as fundamentalism and nationalism take root seemingly everywhere, pushing families into dire situations, where right and wrong aren’t so simple. The struggle for one’s soul is central to this story. It’s also a love story, a tale about family dynamics, an exploration of Islam from multiple perspectives, and a commentary on American violence.

Read More
Commentary: In Search of Appalachia

I entered In Search of Appalachia with excitement at the prospect of reading about Appalachia by an Appalachian, rather than through the eyes of outsiders, as is so often the case in media, who typically present Appalachia as a backward and dirty place— one characterized by lacking, rather than a destination draped in rich culture. But I left In Search of Appalachia with a furrowed brow, disappointed in the missed opportunity of really grappling with our history as colonizers on the frontier.

Read More
Commentary: "The Provincials: A Personal History of Jews in the South" by Eli N. Evans

I opened Eli N. Evans’ book The Provincials: A Personal History of Jews in the South with one question in mind: How does Jewishness intersect with whiteness in America (through the lens of the South)? And I deeply appreciate the complex answer I was given by reading the oft-overlooked history of Jews in the American South, the homeland of Christian evangelism, and battleground between the old and new.

Ultimately, the answer to my question that I discovered in Eli N. Evans’ book was this: White Jews in America perform a balancing act— benefiting from whiteness to protect their families and to achieve prosperity while also taking risks when the opportunity arises to support Black communities.

Read More
Commentary: “Hood Feminism” by Mikki Kendall + “Black Queer Hoe” by Britteny Black Rose Kapri

For the first reads of the Decolonize This Book Club’s second year, we chose Hood Feminism by Mikki Kendall and a collection of poetry by Britteny Black Rose Kapri called Black Queer Hoe.

Read More
Commentary: A History of the Peoples of Siberia: Russia's North Asian Colony 1581-1990

If our goal is to decolonize, then we must start by learning how colonization works; its patterns could be its downfall.

Read More
Commentary: "Sounds Like Home: Growing Up Black and Deaf in the South" by Mary Herring Wright

Mary Herring Wright (1924-2018) was a Black and Deaf writer and teacher who participated in the Black ASL Project, which researched the linguistic features that make Black ASL recognizable as a distinct variety of American Sign Language. Having attended the North Carolina School for the Colored Deaf and Blind (NCSCDB), Mary was deeply familiar with ‘Raleigh Sign Language’— a distinct North Carolina variety of Black American Sign Language primarily used by Black Deaf signers who has attended segregated schools for the deaf, making her position in the project invaluable. Her memoir, Sounds Like Home, mainly focuses on her school days at NCSCDB.

Read More
Commentary: "A Quiet Kind of Thunder" by Sara Barnard

For the hearing world, talking is the end-all-be-all. But do we really need to talk to communicate? A Quiet Kind of Thunder is a young adult story about Steffi, who is selectively mute, who falls in love with Rhys, a Deaf student at her school. It’s a coming-of-age tale about communication and how we all communicate in different ways. Maybe there is more to life than talk!

Read More