Saturday, February 27, 2010

CORA Diversity Roll Call

Ali asked us:

1) Take a look at the magazines or literary journals you read. If you don't read them, pick one up from the library just for the heck of it. Look at the ads, the photo spreads, the authors and subjects of the articles. Do people of color exist in the world this publication presents to its readers? How about gays, lesbians, or people with physical differences?

2) Do you know of a magazine or journal that does embrace diversity? Be it high brow or low brow, tell us about it. If you don't know of any, do a little digging. They've got to be out there.

Outside of committing the awful offense of reading the magazines off the racks in the grocery story, I don’t regularly read print magazines anymore. The grocery market magazines are usually flanked with celebrities or models and they’re usually white. I should add these people look nothing like average folk I know of any race. When I purposely look for a magazine, I am looking for publications that reflect my values and perspective. I read a few journals online like Huffington Post and the writers are a diverse group and articles cover different ethnicity, race and socioeconomic groups.

I also recently picked up a print copy of Latina. When you go to the site, it looks like a typical glam mag and it might be but the older issues I read at work had more than clothes and makeup. One issue had a very good article on Justice Sotoymayor and another ran a feature on racism among people of color. Being Latina encompasses many countries and cultures so I was impressed with the variety of experiences and the multi-hued models.

While I want to see more inclusion, I don’t expect any publication to try to be everything for everybody. I’m not justifying exclusion but I wouldn’t expect a magazine that focuses on a particular culture or religion for example to cover areas outside of their focus. I do want publications that are written for a broad audience to reflect differing perspectives and images that reflect all of their readership.

I don't remember when but I know it's been several years since I purchased or read mainstream publications. Over time the covers became a barely noticeable blip on the radar. All the models pretty looked alike and I stopped expecting to see anything different or find topics that interested me. I should add I'm not to fond of Essence or Ebony either. Just because their target audience is black doesn't mean they reflect my views and experiences.

What I realized is that outside of my reading while I shop, I don’t read publications that differ from my point of view, something, which I said, I was going to start doing. I need to be aware of what other people’s views are.

There are few literary journals I would read if I took the time but since I've been immersed in the book blogging world, I'm always reading a book and thinking about the next five.

Find more responses at Worducopia.

We Interrupt Your Regularly Scheduled Programming....

Cross-posting from Color Online. If you like free books, come by. If you like a good book chat, come by.

Community,

I want take a moment to reiterate our commitment to connecting readers with books so this is a reminder about how to get free books from Color Online:

Participate in CORA Diversity Roll Call. Each month, we will draw a name randomly to win a book from our Prize Bucket. Participation is down and this bothers me. We run a new assignment roughly every two weeks, here or at Worducopia. Join us. It's fun and the exercise introduces participants to new reads and different perspectives on our reading habits.

Participate in Women Unbound. Great challenge and aren't we about women? I have not been shy. I'd like to color up the challenge. Join us. Once a month I draw a name.

The POC Challenge. Color Online is a sponsor. This is really simply. You review a POC title then post your link at the challenge. No count requirement. Post and bounce. How easy does it have to be?

Color Online Quiz. Every month we try to post four quizzes. Random monthly drawing.

Every week I post a query for Sunday Salon and we share what new books we have in our New Crayons post. Starting this week, if you comment to Sunday Salon or you post a New Crayons post on your blog, you'll be entered in a monthly drawing.

We also host giveaways. Stay tune for some wonderful giveaways in March for Women's History Month.

Deadline for A Wish After Midnight giveaway is Sunday.

Life is crazy busy for most of us. I don't always post four quizzes and sometimes I don't announce all winners but I am very serious about redistributing books. Our review policy says we connect readers with books. We honor that commitment.

Today I'm updating the Prize Bucket and the Book Loan page.

If you want to donate books to schools or Color Online, check our contact page. When we get requests or I hear about a school/program looking for books, I send them.

If you don't have books, send me $1 stamps. We don't have a fund. We have you and me, a sister with more passion than cents.

We all do what we can and my part includes shipping books. Special thanks to Barb who sent me a book of stamps. I'm off to the post office today.

Check this post later for contest winner announcement on Sunday.

Happy reading,
S

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

Confession Tuesday: I'm Old Not Blind

It’s Tuesday that means confession time. Tonight I’m ‘fessing up about a couple of guilty pleasures. First: “Castle.” Love the show. I don’t watch a lot of TV but if I manage to remember what day of the week it is and the day hasn’t passed, I like to watch “Castle.” I don’t even know the lead’s name. I liked him in “Firefly” and I like him in this new show. I like Beckett’s character (too thin, but we won’t go there), too. And how can you not like Richard’s daughter, Alexis?

Why do writers in movies always have money and celebrity? They’re usually, good-looking, too.

Second: Indian food buffet or food in general. I cannot curb my appetite. I’ve been exercising more or less for three months and I’ve lost nada. Not gaining but only thing I’m losing is my chance to fit my clothes anytime soon.

Third: my social life is almost completely lived online. Duh, no surprise there. I’m always on or impatiently waiting until I can get on. I try to cut back. My job created a forced weaning, which I resent and so I binge on the weekends. I need to back away from the screen. Let’s hope by summer, I’ve made some progress.

Last is sleep. I can sleep anytime, anywhere. If I don’t absolutely have to do something, I will sleep. When I’m not binge surfing or reading, I’m curling up like my kitty cat. We can sleep anytime.

*Nathan Fillion is Richard Castle. Hey, my online life makes me a Google Goddess.

Monday, February 22, 2010

It's Monday: What Are You Reading?

Each week readers share what they are reading for the week. I joined because there is no way I can review every book I read. Up this week:

Still reading:
Awakening Iran by Shrin Ebadi

Last Night I Sang To The Monster by Benjamin Alire Saenz. See review at La Bloga. The male point of view requires a mental adjustment for me. No exception here but once I fell into step with Zach's train of thought and language I was hooked.


Up next:
Tortilla Sun by Jennifer Cervantes. I like magic so I'm looking forward to this.
When twelve-year-old Izzy discovers a beat-up baseball marked with the words 'Because magic' while unpacking in yet another new apartment, she is determined to figure out what it means.

Taneesha: Never Disparaging by M. LaVora Perry. LaVora is a warm and kind person, and her book is turning out to be a real treat. Taneesha and her family are Buddhist. I know nothing about the religion. Learning about it through the eyes of a child is really fun. I wish I had finished this last month for Social Justice: Religion. I hope I'll be able to add the link anyway.


Underlife by January O'Neil. Last week I shared I need poetry in my life. Can't go wrong with January. If you're intimidated by poetry, try to let go of the days in class. Pick up this collection and discover how easy it is to relate to life when shared by a woman whose own life has been filled with love, loss and the chaos called parenthood. Great review at Boston Area Small Press and Poetry Scene.



Find more posts here at Sheila's One Person's Journey.

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers and other sites of note. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link. Make 2010 the year you commit to read and comment. Your goal: Read and comment to 5 blogs this week.

Give a little lovin'. This week's links:


Malcolm X at Poefrika
Teens that blog @ I'm Here, I'm Queer
Social Justice: Water @ Paper Tigers
Nina Simone at Rhapsody In Books
Reading In Recovery @ Worducopia
Septima Poinestte Clark at Sheila Goss
Sunday Morning Reads at Crazy Quilts

Saturday, February 20, 2010

GLBT Reading: Jacqueline Woodson

GLBT Reading: Guest Post: Jacqueline Woodson

I'm a guest blogger at the GLBT Challenge and yes, talking about my girlcrush, Ms. Woodson. Please come by.

When Ms. Woodson explores race and sexual orientation, it’s always in the context of personal relationships. Her language and the dialogue between characters aren’t political but intimate and this matters. It is much easier to examine social mores and societal norms in the context of our personal lives.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

Confession Tuesday: Celebrating Lucille Clifton

It's Confession Tuesday. There are times when what I need to address involves others but they didn't sign on for Confession Tuesday, I did. And then there is Lucille Clifton's passing. Often when I'm really hurting, I reach for poetry. Today is one of those days. Ms. Clifton's words match the burden I'm feeling.

Rest in peace.



gloria mundi

so knowing,
what is known?
that we carry our baggage
in our cupped hands
when we burst through the waters of our mother.
that some are born
and some are brought
to the glory of this world.
that it is more difficult
than faith
to serve only one calling
one commitment
one devotion
in one life.

from The Book of Light. Copper Canyon Press. 1993

Celebrating Black Women

Lanker is perhaps best known for his book and exhibition of portraits entitled, "I Dream A World: Portraits of Black Women Who Changed America." The debut exhibition at the Corcoran Gallery of Art in Washington D.C. set attendance records for the 111 year old museum in the nation's capital. Currently, his book "I Dream A World" is in its 14th printing.

These last two weeks, I’ve been reading a favorite book of women photo essays, Brian Lanker’s, I Dream A World. My copy is well worn. I have used it for quizzes at Color Online, for profiles for Black History Month and Women’s History Month. I bought my first copy when it published. I love the essays; the photographs and the list of women profiled include names that many readers likely cannot name. I think we should be celebrating these women during Black History Month and beyond. Herein are some of the women who have inspired and influenced the way I think and live:

*Septima Poinsette Clark
Norma Merrick Sklarek
Niara Sudarkasa
Gloria Dean Randle Scott
Harriet Elizabeth Byrd
Sherian Grace Cadoria
Alexa Canady
Jewel Jackson McCabe
Jackie Torrence
Anna Arnold Hedgeman

Does this list contain names you don’t know? Don’t you want to know who they are?

It’s been more than twenty years still every time I revisit this text I am inspired. I wish Mr. Lanker or anyone else would produce a current work like this. Given the lack of positive images of black women in the media this is the kind of work I want to pass out by the truck loads to young girls and young women everywhere. They need to be educated about the legacy of accomplished, beautiful and proud black women. All women should read this book.

Each woman in this volume shares a powerful message. You don’t experience the kind of strength and quiet elegance these women possess enough. Mr. Lanker’s photographers are fitting tributes to extraordinary women.

I encourage you to look for this book. If you’re not happy with it, you can send your copy to me.

* Cover photo

Monday, February 15, 2010

It's Monday: What Are You Reading?

I thinking I'll continue with this meme because there is no way to review every book I read.

Finished:
The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate by Jacqueline Kelly. Loved it.

8th Grade Superzero by Olugbemisola Ruday-Perkovich. Really enjoyed this. It's harder for me to relate to boys so when I do, I know I have the author to thank. I might start reading more MG books.

Still reading:
Awakening Iran by Shrin Ebadi

Just started:
Last Night I Sang To The Monster by Benjamin Alire Saenz. See review at La Bloga.

Up next:
Who knows. My tbr is the teetering tower of books.

Find more posts here at One Person's Journey.

LIttle Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers and other sites of note. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link. Make 2010 the year you commit to read and comment. Your goal: Read and comment to 5 blogs this week.

Give a little lovin'. This week's links:


How To Raise Racist Kids at Geek Dad
Songs for your Valentine at Once Upon A Book
Happiness is Really Real review of Marcelo in the Real World by Francisco X. Stork
Edi reviews Leaving Gee's Bend at Crazy Quilts
Leontyne Price at Rhapsody In Books
Lucille Clifton tribute at Poefrika
Ellen Oh on Whitewashing
Ali reviews Last Night I Sang to The Monster at Worducopia
Ten Top Favorite Poems
Christine Taylor-Butler at 28 Days Later
The 2009 Cybils Winners
Support Feminist Review

Sunday, February 14, 2010

The Sunday Salon: Urban Lit, Cash Cow?

Some things are worth repeating. I'm cross-posting this in its entirety.

Spicing it up this Sunday. I hope this alternate image has piqued your interest because this week's topic is not polite Sunday conversation. Real life isn't always tea and biscuits either so shall we get to this week's query:

Do you read urban/street literature? How do you define it? What does it provide readers, particularly young, disenfranchised readers? Can it be a gateway to other genres? Are there micro-niches within this niche book market? What are examples of the best of this kind of writing? Are there books under this label that you can’t relate to or don’t like?

Please consider these questions and read Zetta Elliott's interview with Vanessa Irvin Morris before you read my response. My opinion is biased.



Why I don’t read urban literature marketed to a black audience

Last week, Pam rightfully called me out for the slant of my questions for the query. This week, I make no apology for my opinion but I hope the questions are open and not biased.

This past week a girlfriend and I commiserated together about a book her teen was reading. My girlfriend mistakenly thought her daughter was engrossed in harmless romance fiction. Said daughter devoured these books in volume all summer. Her latest read she passed onto a friend and that friend was sharing it with a slew of girls anxiously waiting to read it, too. The book, The Prada Plan isn’t the harmless romance my girlfriend believed her daughter was so fond of. “It might as well had been porn,” she said later. The book is salacious and titillating. To paraphrase a line I read, “Slim loved Disayna the moment she came busting out of Dynasty’s sweet pink p—y.”

A few weeks ago, Zetta Elliott interviewed Vanessa Irvin Morris who made a case for urban literature. I didn’t agree with many of Ms. Irvin Morris’ points and this personal experience with a group of teens passing around The Prada Plan only made it harder for me to believe young women gain something by reading street lit.

I’m sure the publisher and author would argue the target audience is mature adults. I get that. But the main character is in her early twenties working for Elite Escort Service. How many forty-year-olds are buying this book? The reality is teens and young women in their twenties make up a large section of the readership, and they gobble this up like other women tune in for their daily dose of soap operas.

While our children think we are ancient, I do remember the naughty books we read as teens. You found your dad's porn or you read the trashy 'true life stories.' These stories didn’t lead to me reading great literature and for today’s teens, sexually explicit material is blaring everywhere twenty-four seven. Teens don’t have to sneak around to find it: you can go online, turn on the TV and pluck a juicy title like NeeNee Does Manhattan off the shelf at the library. My problem with these books is that they perpetuate the ugly, lowest dominator, demeaning images of black women. Aren’t we objectified and vilified by mainstream enough? Do we have to voluntarily put on a dog collar? My girlfriend said she went to the bookstore this weekend and there was a wall full of these books. We will buy self-depreciating material but we won't buy literary and contemporary fiction written by POC writers like McFadden, Elliott, Brice and Howard in the same quantity? These writers work exceptionally hard to get a publishing deal and then a hundred fold harder to promote their work. That reality depresses me.

I know all urban literature like all rap is not misogynistic trash, but call a spade a spade. Penning a tale about money, jewels and sex doesn’t empower young women. It doesn’t build healthy self-images. And those who read it aren’t reading for it that either. I’m sick of our daughters being fed a steady of diet of crap. I want a way to get them to back up from this nasty buffet. I want them to think more of themselves. I want them to reject images of cash boxes between caramel thighs, long wavy hair and green eyes that make Negroes want to grind into them long into the night.

Makes me wanna holla.

Saturday, February 13, 2010

Saturday Six Sentences

Saturday Six is an exercise where you try to describe your reading for the week in six sentences.

It's been a very good week for me. I finally finished The Evolution of Calpurnia Tate by Jacqueline Tate. I leisurely read this YA title over a couple of weeks and I thoroughly enjoyed this Newbery Honor book.

I'm currently reading 8th Grade Superzero by Olugbemisola Ruday-Perkovich. Do read Ari's interview with the author at Reading In Color and this crazy cool video I saw first at Fledgling. I love Reggie

A Wish After Midnight Release Giveaway!

Color Online: A Wish After Midnight Release Giveaway!
Elliott does an excellent job of recreating 1863 Brooklyn and the tumult of the time, including the roiling anger against those who could buy their way out of military service that led to the deadly Draft Riots in July, the back-to-Africa movement that galvanized both white abolitionists and free blacks alike, and the overarching danger of being black and female that exceeds anything Genna had known in the 21st century. And although there is plenty of history embedded in the novel, A Wish After Midnight is written with a lyrical grace that many authors of what passes for adult literature would envy as it examines universal themes of finding lost love, belief in one’s dreams and the power of friendship. ~Paula Woods at Defenders Online.

Tuesday, February 9, 2010

Confession Tuesday: Happy Birthday!

Happy Birthday Ms. Walker and happy birthday to me, too!
February 9th, 1944

No person is your friend who demands your silence, or denies your right to grow.
~Alice Walker

Today is Confession Tuesday and today I am confessing and celebrating. Today Ms. Walker turns 66 and I turn 45. I confess I feel special for a lot of reasons including sharing a birthday with a beloved writer, an amazing woman.

I chose this image because I swear she and my mother look a lot a like here. They're born the same year. While many people are colorstruck, I grew up during the "I'm Black and I'm proud" era. My mother is the same lovely brown Ms. Walker is and I coveted my mother's complexion and her smile. Like Ms. Walker, my mother is also fierce. Growing up, I was daddy's girl but it is clear to me as adult, I am my mother's daughter.

My mother and I have had a challenging relationship but I have always loved her and I've never doubted her love for me. Like my mother and Ms. Walker, I have had my challenges with my own daughters. I am grateful that my girls love me despite my flaws.

While I don't have Ms. Walker's talent, I am equally passionate. I feel connected to her. I know she's not perfect and knowing that helped me come to terms with accepting myself. Because of Ms. Walker's work, I discovered I could love myself and accept my shortcomings.

I know it's easy to worship the accomplished but for me, it's not worship, it's identification that draws me to the writer. What I've learned about her life and from her work is that our life's work comes at price, that we cannot be everything and do everything well. To me, Ms. Walker is beautifully flawed and I don't mean to romanticize that at all.

Ms. Walker, if you saw this, I'd fall over with joy. You probably won't but if you did, I'd want you to know I am grateful you chose the path you did, that you helped me find my own and I am unabashedly proud to share my birthday with you. Happy birthday and many, many more.

Sunday, February 7, 2010

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to an article, contest, interview, poem- anything you think deserves a little lov'n.

Leave comments here, too. Let us know what you checked out. Commit to reading and commenting to 5 posts this week.

Drop those links and check these out:

Mother Writer T-shirts to support Doctors without Borders in Haiti
Spotlight on Bao Phi, Activist & Spoke Word Artist at Racebender
Monday Shout Outs at 58 Inches
Lesotho Blues by Rethabile Masilo at Poefrika
More on Forbidden Language at LaBloga
Diversity Roll Call: Paradigm Shift at Worducopia
Meet LaVora at Fledgling

Children of The Waters: Love, Family and Reconciliation

We’re currently having a discussion about Children of the Waters by Carleen Brice at Color Online. It’s a story about a young, educated black woman who despite having Lupus has a pretty good life. Then her half-sister shows up and Billie discovers not only that she was adopted, but also that she’s half white. Now Billie is a sister who prides herself on been culturally and spiritually grounded. She is a sister who relishes her blackness. She is an African dance teaching, ancestor altar praising and holistic-living sister. Then she finds out she’s not who she thought she was.

Billie has a great family. She has proud, accomplished parents and a loving older brother. She’s involved with a good man and she’s just found out she’s pregnant. Her health is a real concern with her pregnancy and her great man doesn’t respond to the pregnancy like she had hoped. Then this chunky, too friendly, white woman shows up. And the drama begins.

Let me tell you what works for me in the contemporary fiction. The socioeconomic element works. I don’t think we talk enough about class and socioeconomics in this country. We try to have the race discussion but we rarely include how socioeconomics weighs in the mix. Brice inserts it without screaming LESSON. It would have been easy and predictably boring to have made Billie a poor black girl discovering she was rejected by her white wealthy family. Instead the main character is smart, educated, comes from a solid economic background and her family is happy and functional.

The dynamics between men and women in relationships works here. Brice gives us love that works. Nick’s parents’ relationship is ugly and Trish is divorced from a cheating husband but even her relationship with her son’s father had been good at one time. But these relationships don’t dominate the story. Billie’s parents and her brother’s marriages are solid and while Billie and Nick hit a rough patch, they work through it.

The conflict between Trish and Billie feels real. Their reunion is rocky. There is race and the rejection they have to confront and they do, and like in real life it’s not easy. The delivery works. The tone in Children of the Waters has the same comfortable and natural feel of Brice’s successful Orange Mint and Honey (watch Lifetime premier of the tv adapted movie 2/21)

What doesn’t work? I can’t say. I suggest you read the book, join the discussion and honestly tell us what worked and what concerned you. Let’s have a good sistergirl talk about what family, love and reconciliation looks like.

Saturday, February 6, 2010

A Readers Response: Black History Month

I’ve been here 350 years but you’ve never seen me.
~James Baldwin

Black History month has provided an opportunity for another reader response. Today, I wrote the following reply to a review of The Listeners by Gloria Whelan at Rhapsody in Books:

Teachers and librarians,

While this book looks lovely please remember that children need contemporary and fun books about black people. Black History should encompass more than slavery.

You say Black History Month and most kids think slavery and school lessons. The last thing they think is fun. We’ve made plenty of history since the Civil War.

And while I don’t want to scare children, I’m not sure I want children focusing on happy times during slavery. If we’re going to talk about slavery as a way to teach a lesson then we need to be clear why it was ugly and I think we can do that without playing up slaves laughing and dancing.

Yes, February is Black History Month and like many of my friends, I have ambivalent feelings about the month. I didn’t plan any special events or columns for either blog. I’m black 365 days a year. I invite readers all year long to recognize the contributions of black folks and at the tender age of forty-five this year (2/9 in case anyone is wondering) I’ve grown weary of the rehashing of the usual suspects. Before you say my remark is blasphemous or irreverent let me explain.

Black history doesn’t start and end with slavery or Civil Rights but every child in public school at least is indoctrinated with tales of Harriet Tubman, Frederick Douglass, Sojourner Truth, Mary McCloud Bethune, Martin Luther King, Jr., George Washington Carver, Madame C.J. Walker and W.E.B DuBois during the month of February.

What would happen if we asked the average child if they knew who Mae Jemison, Eleanor Holmes Norton, Carol Ann-Marie Gist or Dr. Ben Carson is? Could you answer me if I asked you who Dr. Charles Drew, Clara Howard, Bessie Smith or Dudley Randall was?

Okay, so you’re thinking, “Well educate us.” I did think about writing a post about why we need to educate children and adults about recent historical black figures and relevant contemporary figures and then I opted not to. Why? I’m going to call it
minority fatigue. I’m tired. I’m tired of being the default spokesperson. I’m tired of the task of teaching folks about black people and other POC issues that they could very well learn on their own if they’re interested. I didn’t wait for someone else to sound a clarion call for me to recognize the world is larger than my own backyard. I sought out what I think matters. I asked questions and made it my responsibility to learn.

It is impossible to pretend that you are not heir to, and therefore, however inadequately or unwillingly, responsible to, and for, the time and place that give you life.
~James Baldwin

Those who went before us didn’t struggle and die for us to revere them but for us to continue to achieve and to build a legacy for future generations so I’m doing what I can and my work doesn’t begin and end in February so when I read the umpteenth book review about slavery, I groan. I don’t want us to forget. But it’s been more than 300 years, people. It’s time to update what you know about your fellow Americans.

What does Black History Month mean to you? Do you only revisit slave narratives and Civil Rights? Can you name any iconic figures not associated with these standard time periods?

Tuesday, February 2, 2010

Little Lov'n Monday

Little Lov'n Monday is a day we celebrate the work of fellow bloggers and other sites of note. Between now and Wednesday, post a link to anything you think deserves a little lov'n. Leave a link. Make 2010 the year you commit to read and comment.

Give a little lovin'. This week's links:

The Boy Who Harnessed The Wind @ Guys Lit Wire
Books I've Cherished @ Cynical, Ornery, Sublime, Lush
Looking to Agriculture to Help Rebuild Haiti @ Nourishing the Planet
Newcomer, School for Activists
Do All Indians Live in Tipis @ American Indians in Children's Literature
Sunday Morning Reads @ Crazy Quilts