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#bookrecommendations

3 posts3 participants0 posts today

Read MODEL HOME by Rivers Solomon if you love quintessential queer black literature, haunted houses, fractured families, sprawling suburbs, loving cups of tea, gut-punching prose, late night sanctuary diners, Jenny Holzer's Abuse of Power, Mothers, dissociating, running away & the unexplainable.

@bookstodon #book #books #bookreview #bookreviews #bookrecs #bookrec #bookrecommendations #bookrecommendation #readersofmastodon #readersonmastodon #2025reads #ireadbooks #lgbtqbooks #queerbooks

It’s super interesting to read a philosopher’s take on how he thought Covid would impact our culture as a whole.

He was wrong, but I think we all were. I distinctly remember thinking that Covid could - for all the heartache and death it brought with it - also bring a reframing of our lives and a refreshed priority list to all of us. We could really take a moment and breathe for a bit, look around, and evaluate whether we as a society are okay with the grind that is modernity.

Turns out yes, people were okay with it. Well. Rich people were okay with it. As so often happens, the curtain lifted a bit to show that that so-called “unskilled labor force,” is actually holding up civilization while the rich just pretend to do important things.

At this point, Covid feels like a wasted opportunity to right an awful lot of wrongs.

Edit: I wrote the above in 2022 and I feel like I’ve just gotten more radicalized year after year from my disappointment in all of us as a society. We could have done so much. We could currently be in such a better place. But no, the workforce was forced to cave to the rich, showing their trick of limiting wages to barely livable also meant that nobody had the opportunity to reject the systems that they set up.

We were set up, exploited, and manipulated and words cannot express just how fucking angry I am about the whole thing because now there are ZERO silver linings or redeeming values to Covid19. Just a whole lot of unnecessary death and tighter grip on the people by corporations and billionaires.

It kills me, man. I’m not even kidding. I hate it and it breaks my heart every. single. day.

#bookstagram #book #books #bookreview #bookrecommendation #bookrecommendations #booklover #booknerd #bookaddict #read #readmore #readmorebooks #reader #constantreader #philosophy #slavojzizek #covid #pandemic #covidbook #booksky #readersofpixelfed #read #readinglog #covid19

This book was recommended by my therapist. I am so glad I found it. This author's life mirrors some of my own. I felt the heartbreak of breaking free from a broken family, and I felt the struggles of starting a higher education after almost no real schooling (thanks, mom). I had to earn my GED first, but close enough.
Honestly, it was so hard for me that it took a couple of years to read it. It has a special place on my bookshelf.
#tarawestover
#bookrecommendations
#educated
#book

I highly recommend the Burnout book by the Nagoskis. It's easy to read and incredibly relieving even within the first chapter. They share context on what burnout is and where it comes from, which directly connects to grounding the practical actions you can take to effectively address burnout

There are also burnout factors that are NOT in your control, and they don't beat around the bush in acknowledging that — which stands out as a rare gem among these sorts of books (most either leave that out or make it their whole schtick)
#BookRecommendations
burnoutbook.net/

burnoutburnoutBurnout: The Secret to Unlocking the Stress Cycle, a book by Emily Nagoski, Ph.D. and Amelia Nagoski, D.M.A

Today's book recommendation for Black History Month is "The Exiles of Florida" by Joshua Giddings. (1858)

This book explores the intersection between black history and Native American history. At a time when Florida was still part of Spanish territory, people escaping the slave states of Georgia, Mississippi, and the Carolinas fled south. Florida was closer than the northern free states, and Spain had a policy of providing refuge to black fugitives from the slave states.

In Florida, they found allies among the Seminole, who welcomed them in and gave them a home. They became caught up in the wars between the United States government and the Seminole. The "Seminole Wars" had a series of causes, including territorial expansion of the United States and plans to take Seminole land and remove the Seminole to reservations.

But as the author Joshua Giddings, a prominent abolitionist, made clear in this book, the recovery of their "property", (black slaves), played a very large part in the continuance of these attacks. While Seminole were either killed or moved to reservations, black fugitives were returned to slavery.

Link to a free public domain audiobook at LibriVox:

librivox.org/the-exiles-of-flo

Link to a free public domain copy of the book at Project Gutenberg:

gutenberg.org/ebooks/41316

librivox.orgLibriVoxLibriVox

Today's book recommendation for Black History Month is "The Black Box: Writing the Race" by Henry Louis Gates. (2024)

This book is based on the series of lectures the author presented to his African American Studies class at Harvard.

It traces the development of black literature in the United States from colonial times to the present, and how black writers used words on paper to define and explore collective black identity.

Through the works of such writers as Phillis Wheatley, Frederick Douglass, W. E. B. Du Bois, Booker T. Washington, Zora Neale Hurston, Rich­ard Wright, James Baldwin and Toni Morrison, Gates traces how black writers grappled with issues central to black experience, and engaged in spirited argument about what it means to be black.

From the publisher's synopsis of the book:

"This is the epic story of how, through essays and speeches, novels, plays, and poems, a long line of creative thinkers has unveiled the contours of—and resisted confinement in—the black box inside which this nation within a nation has been assigned, willy-nilly, from the nation’s founding through to today."

Publisher's information about his book:

penguinrandomhouse.com/books/6

#BlackHistoryMonth
#BookRecommendations

PenguinRandomhouse.comThe Black Box by Henry Louis Gates, Jr.: 9780593299807 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: BooksA New York Times Notable Book “Henry Louis Gates is a national treasure. Here, he returns with an intellectual and at times deeply personal meditation...

Today's book recommendation for Black History Month is "Better Living Through Birding" by Christian Cooper.

In May 2020, we all saw the news of the Central Park "Incident" (as Cooper calls it). While birding in the park, Cooper asked a white woman to leash her dog, as unleashed dogs were not permitted in that area. She called the police to falsely complain that a black man was "threatening" her.

Cooper devotes one chapter, near the end of this book, to a discussion of that disturbing incident. But it's only one chapter in a book which is mainly a celebration of life and birds.

The book is partly a personal memoir of Cooper's life, growing up as a gay black youth, working at Marvel comics, and travelling the world, with love of birds always threaded through it all.

It's that thread of birding which ties it all together. The book is a lively celebration of the beauty and fascination to be found in birds and in the natural world. The "Seven Joys of Birding" are explored, along with the reminder that birds can reconnect us to the larger life outside our personal preoccupations.

It's important to remember that life is more than its darkest moments. Books like this acknowledge dark moments exist, but move beyond them to bring us zesty reminders of the value of creativity, exploration, and intellectual curiosity.

Link to publisher's info about this book
penguinrandomhouse.com/books/6

#BlackHistoryMonth
#BookRecommendations

PenguinRandomhouse.comBetter Living Through Birding by Christian Cooper: 9780593242407 | PenguinRandomHouse.com: BooksNEW YORK TIMES BESTSELLER • Central Park birder Christian Cooper takes us beyond the viral video that shocked a nation and into a world of avian adventu...