August 2025
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    12 Comments

    1. catandthefiddler on

      Roll of Thunder, Hear my Cry by Mildred D Taylor. I didn’t grow up in the USA, this was an interesting and insightful introduction to what life might have looked like during the seperation period

    2. IntroductionFew1290 on

      Horse by Geraldine Brooks and Hell of a Book are two that came to mind

    3. An Autobiography – Angela Davis

      Long Walk to Freedom – Nelson Mandela

      The Autobiography of Malcom X – Malcom X

      also any book by James Baldwin

    4. suntzufuntzu on

      Colson Whitehead is probably a great.place to start, at least for understanding Blackness in the US. The Nickel Boys and Harlem Shuffle are his most realist books. Undeeground Railroad is a bit more allegorical. But its great for understanding the dilemmas and contradictions of “freedom” in a slaving society.

      EDIT: Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi is a good exploration of intergenerational trauma in the African diaspora. She covers some of the same themes as Whitehead but centering womens’ experiences more.

    5. boba_and_mia on

      How to Slowly Kill Yourself and Others in America by Kiese Laymon! It’s a collection of short essays talking about what it means to live and grow up in the South and in the world of academia as a Black man, and touches subjects like hiphop, writing, gun violence and family dynamics.

    6. The-Man-Friday on

      Walter Mosley’s Easy Rawlins series. I’m a white boy and he’s my favorite author. His world is so lived in and each time I read a new book, I don’t always remember the plots, but I’m happy for having spent time in his universe.

    7. thisismyecho on

      A little older, but I read “makes me wanna holler” many years ago, thought it was a perspective to appreciate

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