People Person | Book Review by Felicia

 

Ranking: 4 Stars, This book was quite a page turner. The drama! The Thrills! The Family! I did not expect anything that happened but I was happy to keep on reading. 

About: People Person is about the children of Cyril Pennington and how they grow and learn to deal with life with a deadbeat father. The majority of the story comes from Dimples pov. Dimple is the middle child who brings all the siblings back together when her life begins to unravel out of control. 

Review:  I came in expecting to read a low stake family fiction novel. Instead, this novel included a fast pace low key thriller element to it. The family dynamics from distant to close knit was terrific to read. We had the chance to read about each sibling and see a more in depth view on where they are coming from. I personally got a bit tired of Dimple, the main character, being taken advantage of over and over again. But, I am glad you get to see the rest of the siblings come in to defend or help her out. This book covers some intense topics  but it also has wholesome moments that don’t make it real issues overbearing. I highly suggest you pick this novel up and read it. 

Black Girl in Paris | Book Review by Sam

 

About:

Black Girl in Paris by Shay Youngblood is a coming of age novel. After reading about the author’s life this novel felt like perhaps a dramatized version of her life. The main character (Eden), like the author, is a writer, who moves to Paris to follow her creative dreams and like the author takes on odd jobs to make a living until she can hopefully make it big as a writer. We follow as Eden goes through the harsh realities of being in what’s supposed to be the Black creative mecca.

Review:

The backdrop of Black Girl in Paris by Shay Youngblood is Paris in the mid-1980s. When we are introduced to Eden, she seems like a naive but hopeful 20-something year old. She moves to Paris because all the great Black artists of the Harlem Renaissance that she looks up to moved there to thrive creatively. However, she moves to Paris with no money at all. A young Black Parisian girl takes her under her wing and she is saved momentarily.

From there Eden becomes a nanny and then engages in a few other questionable activities to make money. You can feel her desperation to live and eat and simply take care of herself through the pages. Eden meets several interesting characters throughout her time in Paris – and not all of them mean her well. She will not always navigate being introduced to these characters in the smartest way but she does always learn a lesson and shares it with us. You may read and want Eden to win as a fellow creative, you may want to see a dream realized. But internally you may also be screaming at her “Girl, does this make sense?” 

In true artist form you will read about Eden seemingly to fall in love multiple times for different reasons with men, women, and I would go so far as to say queer persons although the author does not specifically identify them as such. The author highlights love in several forms, the romantic sense as well as the community sense. The importance of having a home away from home – in a place, a person, a community is evident. It is often the life force that helps you keep going. In the variety of characters that we learn about you may find someone that is familiar to you – I know this was true for me as someone who lived abroad and lived in 3 different cities throughout my 20s.  

The author made stylistic choices to continue to bring to the forefront that this is Paris in the 80s and racism and terrorism is very much alive – no matter what the James Baldwins and the Josephine Bakers want you to believe about Paris, it is not perfect. In the end the harder Eden tries the more she seems to be set back, it is not until she finally lets go of all expectations that her dreams seem to come together. 

Read this story to get a healthy dose of what it means to be an artist with a mix of reality and romance.

 

A Song Below Water | Book Review by Felicia

 

About:

This book is all about Black Girl Magic. Two really close friends are living in a world that despises and discriminates against Sirens. As young black girls growing up one must discover a way to find her voice and the other needs to discover who is her authentic self. Along the way they must deal with the traumatic current events that tell black girls they do not matter.

Review:

A Song Below Water  Review: 

Ranking: 2 Stars for this one. It was rough to get through this book. I almost didn’t want to finish it at all. The concept of the book is wonderful. It involves the essence of Black girl magic mixed with social justice. But, the execution fell through. In the end, the book felt like it was doing too much. 

This was a short and impactful read. The best aspect of the book was the main characters’ love and support for each other. I love to see young Black girls who are unified and well connected. I was rooting for the main characters to discover their confidence and find a way to be their true selves. However, that is all the only thing I  loved about this book. There were too many elements to this book that made the writing and story go all over the place which caused me to not enjoy reading this novel. As a fantasy novel I felt very overwhelmed and confused by the magic system in this world. I am left with many questions but without any desire to discover the answers. I felt tired and over the concept of the book by the end. Unfortunately, I was not enthralled by the overall storyline or writing. 

Like Water for Chocolate | Book Review by Sam

 

About:

Like Water for Chocolate by Laura Esquivel is a Mexican magical realism novel that follows the life of Tita and her powers through cooking. Each chapter opens with a recipe and then we learn why the meal was so impactful in Tita’s story. Like Water for Chocolate is an intricately woven story of love, family, and betrayal.

Review:

This Mexican story details the life of Tita who is the youngest daughter of a traditional Mexican family. The way in which we are introduced to Tita should warn us that her story will be tragic. She comes into the world crying in the kitchen. This will be significant throughout the novel as we realize that Tita’s emotions are imparted into the meals she makes and Impacts the emotions of the other characters when they eat it. The characters become overcome with anger or lust.

This novel is full of romance, drama, food, and magic. As the youngest daughter, we learn that it will be Tita’s responsibility to take care of her mother. That means that Tita will not be permitted to marry until her mother dies. This is the first major problem as it becomes evident that Tita has already fallen in love with Pedro. Let me just say that Pedro is a menace. When he cannot marry Tita he marries her sister, Rosaura, under the guise that at least he will be able to stay close to Tita. How heartbreaking. One sister has to watch her love be with someone else and the other sister has to live with knowing she will never be loved fully by her husband. 

As the chef of the family, Tita is tasked with making food for the wedding, including the cake. The strong emotions that Tita has and her cooking skills are interwoven throughout the story. Esquivel has given Tita a great gift, but ultimately it is used to influence everyone’s emotions but it does not ever lead to where I would like. I would have loved for Tita to realize she is too good for the world on the ranch (specifically Pedro and her Mama Elena) and move on from them. 

Not all of the characters were likable, but you know a story is intriguing when you haven’t necessarily fallen in love with the characters, yet you just have to know what happens – so you continue reading. There are moments that give us a peek into what freedom or love could be like. In the end we get not a perfect story but what I would call a human story on what it would be like if we gave into our every desire or emotion. 

Overall the novel was magnificently engaging. Sometimes, I don’t enjoy magical realism because I’d just like the author to choose to have a fantasy story or not. However, this story kept me captivated from beginning to end and I finished it within two days. Tita’s story is tragic (to me), but absolutely worth the read.  

 

Wings of Ebony | Book Review by Felicia

 

About:

Rue discovers that she has powers and gets separated from her younger sister. On her sister’s birthday Rue returns home no longer caring about following magic rules. Rue ends up having to save her sister and community and now people are after her to stop her from exposing the truth about magic.

Review:

Wings of Ebony by J.  Elle is filled with action, magic, and drama.  Rue is a young girl on a mission to save her sister and her community. After a year of learning about magic and following the rules Rue has had enough. She is ready to return to her true home and be with the people that matter the most to her. This book had a few unclear parts and in the end I felt that the readers needed more information. I didn’t feel any real closure or a good setup for a second book. I will read the second book because I am a fan of fantasy novels but I am not completely locked into this new world yet. 

You Should See Me in a Crown | Book Review by Sam

 

About:

You Should See Me in a Crown by Leah Johnson is a young lesbian girl’s coming of age story. The main character Liz Lighty is in her senior year and waiting to see if she will be selected for a scholarship in her dream orchestra program at her dream school. She ultimately decides to enter her school’s prom court contest to try to earn the title of queen and the scholarship that comes along with it.

Review:

In You Should See Me in a Crown we have another example of Black excellence and the pressure that can come along with it. Liz Lighty excels both in the academic arena and the music space. She doesn’t get the orchestra scholarship that she has been looking forward to for all of her high school career. It was the scholarship that was meant to help her get to the same college as her late mother. Her next opportunity to get the scholarship money is to enter her school’s contest to become prom queen. This is completely out of character for her but, her friends and family step up to help her along the way. 

Liz entering the contest shakes up the dynamic in her small Indiana town. Poor black girls aren’t supposed to win prom queen. They aren’t supposed to have the audacity to believe they can disrupt the town’s traditions in this way. But, Liz doesn’t care – her focus is achieving her dreams of honoring her mother’s legacy and going to the same college as her. We learn that there is more that makes Liz other than her race and socioeconomic status. She also likes girls. She begins to date and fall for the love interest Amanda (bka Mack).

Liz’s journey towards accepting herself and  finding her tribe/where she belongs is an inspiring story. Even though this was a Young Adult novel, I found that I learned more about myself and found some confidence as I read. I was rooting for Liz start to finish. I just want all Black girls to win. 

This has been one of my favorite reads of the podcast. It was a beautifully written story of family, friendship, and first love. She faced several academic and personal challenges, realizing in the end  she doesn’t have to face them alone. Everyone should pick this book up, it was a delight to read. 

Seven Days in June | Book Review by Felicia

 

About:

Seven Days in June is an adult romance novel that highlights the history of a short teenage love that is destined to reignite.  The characters in this novel deal with intense issues but they find a way to push through on their own and even better together. 

I want to start off by giving a trigger warning this book contains topics such as trauma, sexual assault, and self harm. 

Review:

The novel starts off in an unique and unexpected way that immediately draws a reader into the story. A story about Eva, a successful erotica writer who is trying to make a pivot in her writing career. As a Black woman writer who has forged a career in a genre that isn’t typically deemed respectable Eva tends to doubt her own worth and credibility. Then there is Shane, a critically acclaimed writer who doesn’t write anymore but chooses to mentor children. Even though they have been a part for many years Eva and Shane have always been in conversation with each other. Tia Williams excellently demonstrates the intricacies in a second chance romance. I honestly couldn’t stop reading and when it was over I wanted more of Eva and Shane’s story.  I highly suggest reading this book and rereading it.

Pride | Book Review by Sam

 

About:

Pride by Ibi Zoboi  is a modern retelling of Jane Austen’s Pride and Prejudice. Instead of England the setting is Brooklyn, New York (specifically Bushwick). The Bennets have become Benitez and are Afro-Latina (Haitian and Dominican) and Mr. Darcy is now Darius, an African American teenager from an affluent family that moves into the neighborhood. 

Review:

It was difficult for me to dive into the retelling as I started the story due to my slight obsession with the original Pride and Prejudice. I did a high school book report on the novel and then started on a journey of watching every TV and movie version I could get my hands on. As I read the book I kept thinking this is different, this is different. Eventually, I convinced myself to see it as a stand alone novel and also found myself captured by the poetry of the main character Zuri. Her words served as a transition from chapter to chapter and set the tone of her feelings as different events transpired. 

Readers who are familiar with Pride and Prejudice will find several similar elements in the  modern retelling of Pride, but will eventually see it as a coming of age story of a young Afro-Latina girl who is having to come to terms with all the changes happening in her life. Zuri’s neighborhood is changing. Her family is changing. She is changing. 

The Bushwick neighborhood is going through gentrification, and Zuri sees Darius Darcy as a reason for the area becoming unaffordable for her family. Zuri’s sister who she’s been waiting for to come back from college has fallen in love and is not around as much. Zuri herself is getting ready to go away to college and is having to come to terms with the possibility that she cannot always be there to be the protector of the family. To be the guardian of her family and her neighborhood she will have to accept change as well as evolve herself. 

Zuri also must realize that everything is not as it seems and not to make quick judgments. Reading this book you will learn about Bushwick and growing into yourself. I would suggest this book to people who have a connection to New York, the way the author details the neighborhood, I believe New Yorkers who grew up in the Bushwick area would find it like a love letter to their childhood. I also believe this book is worth reading for Zuri’s poetry alone, every word I read touched my spirit. 

Charming as a Verb | Book Review by Felicia

 This was a 3.5 star kind of book. It was quite a charming and intriguing book to read. Ben Philippe has a great writing voice that is quite relatable. This book will have you on the edge but it accurately expresses how the college application process can be intense, overwhelming, and stressful. Plus, there is teen love and a happy ending. 

About:

This is a young adult novel about Henri, a Haitian American boy embarking on the journey to get into his dream college. 

Review:

This book starts off as a wholesome read then it sends you off on an emotional roller coaster. Henri has all the charm in the world but his charming skills can’t compete with the resources other students have at their disposal when it comes to getting into college. As a child of Haitian immigrants Henri’s college dreams become a family dream that involves an immense amount of pressure to commit to only one kind of future. However, Henri’s life intertwines with Corinne, a fellow classmate who helps him realize there might be value in pursuing your true passion and still having a successful life. This novel was an emotionally heavy read with the way it coincided with my own life. There were a few twists and turns that made me even reconsider my own path about college and that’s part of what reading is about. Sometimes it’s about decompressing but other times the reading journey can really help a reader navigate or affirm certain emotions. 

One True Loves | Book Review by Sam

I’m giving Bryant’s second novel 4 stars. I’m loving this author’s quirky yet cool take on young adult romance. She has a fan in me and I can’t wait until her next release.

About:

One True Loves by Elise Bryant is our 2nd read from the author. This story is still within the same universe as Elises’s first novel Happily Ever Afters. This book follows Lorene and her journey of self-discovery and learning more about herself as well as true love. In this book we are confronted with the downsides of Black excellence as the standard and what it means for those who consider a nontraditional path in a traditional family.

Review:

Lorene is an eclectic and artistic young woman. This should not be a surprise considering that Lorene is a graduate of an elite arts high school. However, her family’s expectations weigh on her heavily. She has a lawyer dad and a nonprofit executive mother. More than that she has a genius little sister and an older brother on track to go to law school. Lorene has been accepted to NYU so she is no slacker, however she isn’t sure of her major. This has put her parents in crisis mode, and are demanding that she have a major by the end of the summer. 

For the duration of the summer Lorene and her family will be on a European cruise. Tessa, Lorene’s best friend and the main character from Ms. Bryant’s first novel, believes this is Loren’s opportunity to fall in true love (and Tessa has lots of pop culture references to millennial favorite the Lizzie McGuire Movie). However, Lorene is preoccupied with trying to determine what she will do about her college major. 

As the story goes along we find Lorene opening herself up to love interest Alex. They had a rocky start and they seem to be polar opposites, in contrast to Lorene’s high level artistry and indecisiveness about her future, Alex is a Pre-Med major with a 5 year plan to follow in his mother’s footsteps to become a doctor. Despite Alex’s seemingly straight and narrow personality, he is the one that makes Lorene realize that her artistic accomplishments is just as valuable as her family and siblings’ academic accomplishments. Lorene opens up more and more to the idea that she can follow her passion for art as well as follow her heart. 

In the end, Lorene realizes that the Black excellence standard that her family has upheld, while done out of the belief that this was the way for them to be successful and achieve all that they could out of life – it can be quite damaging. It can cause anxiety and keep one from pursuing a life of their dreams. She learns to no longer be afraid of her passions or her desire to be truly in love. 

I continue to love the quirky teenagers that Ms. Bryant writes about. Within each of her novels there has been a message larger than romantic love. These teenagers are learning to fall in love with themselves and to recognize the greatness within themselves outside of what the world describes as “success and achievement”. I suggest this read to anyone who is interested in stories with multi-layered messages and cute romance woven together.