Reviews by Juliana

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My Broken Language: A Memoir
by Quiara Alegría Hudes
the years in the making (11/24/2021)
My Broken Language by Quiara Alegría Hudes is a rich and complex text. A memoir written at the age of forty to record the years of learning that went into forging her identity, an identity including the multitudes in the Perez family. These are the years that went intomore
Buses Are a Comin': Memoir of a Freedom Rider
by Charles Person, Richard Rooker
Freedom Riders (11/10/2021)
Literally and metaphorically, Charles Person describes the road to and his actual involvement in the protest action of May 1961 called Freedom Riders.
He manages to render the clear chronology and facts which led to the event while also reconstructing the lineage of peoplemore
Take My Hand
by Dolen Perkins-Valdez
Through the lens of fiction (8/31/2021)
This is an important book which uses fiction to make known and confront the world with some horrific real events. These events make us meditate on the trauma, suffering and injustice done to poor Black women in Alabama in the 1970’s and their long-term effects. And this ismore
Transcendent Kingdom
by Yaa Gyasi
Clash (8/7/2021)
When we start reading the complex, multilayered novel Transcendent Kingdom by Yaa Gyasi, Gifty, the main character, is introduced as the eleven-year-old girl sent over to her aunt in Ghana to wait for her mother to recover in Alabama from an illness.
So begins the subjectivemore
Daughters of Smoke and Fire: A Novel
by Ava Homa
A razor-sharp voice (8/7/2021)
With a razor-sharp voice and incisiveness, Ava Homa tells the story of Leila, a Kurdish girl who grows up in and then flees Mariwan, a small, impoverished place in Kurdish Iran. Her world is constrained to gravitate around her family and especially around her youngermore
New York, My Village: A Novel
by Uwem Akpan
A tour de force (8/5/2021)
From the moment we read the opening sentence of the book, in which our hero, Ekong Udousoro, expresses his enthusiasm at his seemingly impending visit to New York, we, the readers, know we have ahead a whole course of adventures and possibly, misadventures, and indeed themore
The Dutch House
by Ann Patchett
A house with character, a female character as large as they come (7/7/2021)
The novel is both the story of a family, the Conroys, and of the house which the family acquired after unexpected financial success. Originally belonging to the Dutch family of the VanHoebeeks, the house has a traditional flair and is imbued with the personality of itsmore
The Vanishing Half: A Novel
by Brit Bennett
Finding oneself (7/6/2021)
I found Bennett’s The Vanishing Half to read like a classic. A solid, almost old-fashioned story of family and destiny-making away from and in the small towns and big cities of America, woven around the big theme of identity, racial identity, gender identity, in the span ofmore
Ariadne
by Jennifer Saint
A place in its own right (7/6/2021)
In Jennifer Saint’s novel we learn that Ariadne, the princess of Crete, grew up with a ruthless, greedy father, King Minos, with stories of vengeful gods who punish women for the sins of the men in their lives and with her half-brother, the Minotaur, the monster who roamsmore
The Mystery of Mrs. Christie
by Marie Benedict
A Fresh Take (10/23/2020)
It is the first novel by Marie Benedict that I read and the first time I learn about the incident inspiring this story. If you are anything like me, you go about trying to learn some of the facts behind this true event, read about other explorations of the topic, aremore
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