People Park: Citizens and Readers

2014-03-18T11:26:17-04:00

The cover of People Park invites readers to take a walk in another's shoes. See? They're actually right there: the shoes, on the cover, with their laces still tied. But it's not going to be easy to wedge your feet in, not like that. You will have to do

People Park: Citizens and Readers2014-03-18T11:26:17-04:00

Survived: Alix Ohlin’s Inside

2020-09-16T16:00:32-04:00

What happens inside, behind closed doors, in private moments, and in minds and hearts: that's the stuff of Alix Ohlin's novel. House of Anansi, 2012 "'He wouldn’t let me in,' she said, 'and I refused to stay out.'" Mitch's mother says that of his father. She is not

Survived: Alix Ohlin’s Inside2020-09-16T16:00:32-04:00

Weighted: The Imposter Bride

2020-09-16T16:00:46-04:00

It is a basic human need.  “Our need to know where we come from, to connect it to who we are and where we’re going.” Harper Collins, 2012 Ruth becomes aware of this need, first, when she is six years old, but that is just the beginning. It

Weighted: The Imposter Bride2020-09-16T16:00:46-04:00

BHM: Another Untold Story

2021-02-01T10:56:07-05:00

Both The Hanging of Angélique and Black Indians discuss what is not commonly discussed, what has been habitually overlooked, what has been deliberately concealed. They are the sort of non-fiction that compels readers to nudge and/or wake those around them, with a stream of indignant DidYouKnow's and CanYouBelieve's. HarperCollins, 2006 Afua

BHM: Another Untold Story2021-02-01T10:56:07-05:00

Home: The Return

2017-07-20T17:44:27-04:00

Dany Laferrière's The Return (2009) Translated by David Homel Douglas & McIntyre, 2011 David Homel says that he has translated Dany Laferrière's work so often now that he knows how he ticks, knows his schtick, knows his voice so well that he has avoided translating anyone else for awhile. Perhaps that's

Home: The Return2017-07-20T17:44:27-04:00
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