Around the Year in 52 Books discussion
Weekly Topics 2024
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14. A book with a main character who is Black, Indigenous, or a Person of Color


I also want to read The Trees or something else by Percival Everett. Probably racism.
I will read about indigenous characters for this prompt and/or the Canada/Australia/NZ prompt. I put some of my favorites on the listopia. I liked the eerie Moon of the Crusted Snow by Waubgeshig Rice, so I might read the sequel Moon of the Turning Leaves.
There are many fun magical indigenous books too.
For a different approach, I highly recommend Stöld, Stolen by Ann-Helén Laestadius. It’s about indigenous reindeer herders in Sweden. I liked the college age main character and the mystery in the story.

I am reading Empire of Wild for the 'touch of magic' prompt, with an indigenous MC, and Gold Diggers for 'Going for Gold', where the main characters are POC.

I’m most interested in these
The Violin Conspiracy
Jazz
The Direction of the Wind
Americanah
The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store - added


The Faithless
To Shape a Dragon's Breath
Silver Phoenix
She Who Became the Sun

A-Ma: Alchemy of Love
A-Ma Alchemy of Love by ٲš Pantović

„Seated on a panel with her fellow writers, Maltese-Serbian novelist ٲš Pantović has been known to use slam poetry to perform her poetic body of work. Like her prose, the improvised words, tribal music, sounds, lengthy ‘aum� chanting, are neither too preposterous nor too earnest but endlessly curious. A bridge builder between East and West, following ancient archaeological findings, she often dives into historic settings more than 2,000 years back in time.� Sunday Times
A-Ma Alchemy of Love


I loved Three Day Road! I only recently learned it was part of a series, so I may find room for the next book in next year's prompts (maybe continuing a series, since I don't read many series!)


The book I'm choosing to start with is Notes of a Native Son which is his first published collection of essays. I can't image this won't work out, but if it does not for some reason, I have at least a couple of dozen options that I've flagged for this prompt, and I'm sure many more on my TBR.
Also, I believe we all agree, that even though the prompt says "character", that when reading non-fiction, this translates to "person in the book".

- Leave the World Behind by Rumaan Alam
- The Ministry of Utmost Happiness by Roy Arundhati
- Map of the Invisible World by Tash Aw
- The Girl with the Louding Voice by Abi Daré
- Patsy by Nicole Y. Dennis-Benn
- Freshwater by Akwaeke Emezi
- Mr Loverman by Bernardine Evaristo
- The Book of Night Women by Marlon James
- An American Marriage by Tayari Jones

The Heaven & Earth Grocery Store
The Map of Salt and Stars
Moloka'i


I want to recommend three books by Ernest J Gaines:
A Lesson Before Dying
A Gathering of Old Men
The Autobiography of Miss Jane Pittman


So, it wasn't a bad by any means, but I didn't love it.

Wow, I felt so similarly. But you are so much better at expressing it. This book had all the elements I should love. Yet something kept me from fully loving it.


BIO: A book with a Black, Indigenous, or a Person of Color main character written by an author who is also Black, Indigenous, or a Person of Color.
REJECT: A book with a bilingual character
The characters are Japanese.
Finished: 02/24/2024
Rating: 3.5 stars

Main character is Nigerian and disabled as a bonus. It's interesting to speculate on how technology could help the disabled but also what prejudice this might incur.



short and sweet: 3.5
This book left me feeling quite perplexed. It frequently shifted across different generations, which was disorienting. However, it ultimately proved to be an enjoyable read, primarily because I grew up in Memphis, and many of the locations and streets mentioned were very familiar to me.






My 2024 plan is to "not plan."
BOOK 1 ~ I work at a big library and I'm just going to go with the first book that appeals to me that crosses my returns desk.
BOOK 2 ~ And I'm challenging myself to work on clearing out my old TBR shelf this year, so I'm going to read the dustiest "fits the prompt" book on my TBR shelf as well.
~ � ~
BOOK 1

Read ~ 3.27.24
Pages ~ 336
Rationale ~ Luz, Maria Josie, Diego, Pidre - all are Indigenous people of the North American Midwest
Review ~ ★★�
This is a very atmospheric type novel with rich description of place and time, but the character story lines are trite and fairly sterotypical. The competing timelines are really hard to follow. There were a lot of characters to keep track of, and their relationships to each other were hard to figure out from the narrative. I think it would have been a more effective tale were these timeline sequential rather than concurrent. Luckily, there is a generational map in the front part of the book, so that helped. But the book was pretty much a "meh" read for me. Almost a 3 star, but just not quite. It had so much potential, such a beautiful cover, and a really intriguing blurb. I really felt let down, so I'm a little annoyed about that, which is probably what contributed to my unwillingness to rate it any higher.
~ � ~
BOOK 2

Read ~ 3.28.24
Pages ~ 366
Rationale ~ The Angels are a Mexican-American blended family.
Review ~ ★★★★
There is an nice level of humor in this book - mostly because these characters are so REAL, and they have the ability to laugh at themselves and the life that they have been handed. They are a family, but broken? I don't think so. Far from it. I have to admit that I cried a bit at the end of this one. It was a rich read!




The Personal Librarian � Marie Benedict & Victoria Christopher Murray � 3***
As she has done with other women “lost in history,� Benedict shines a light on a little-recognized woman who had enormous influence on American culture. Belle da Costa Greene, a Black woman who passed as white to work as J P Morgan’s personal librarian. It’s an interesting history lesson and well told, if somewhat repetitive.
LINK to my full review


This book has received many awards and it's no surprise. A raw and gripping story that looks at racism and prejudice, and coming to terms with one's true self and what's important.
4 stars
My review here:
/review/show...

Books mentioned in this topic
The Ironclad Alibi (other topics)James (other topics)
Happiness (other topics)
Happiness (other topics)
The School for Good Mothers (other topics)
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Authors mentioned in this topic
Michael Kilian (other topics)Percival Everett (other topics)
Aminatta Forna (other topics)
Aminatta Forna (other topics)
Jessamine Chan (other topics)
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ATY Listopia: /list/show/1...
What are you reading for this prompt?