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tbetty

tbetty

has 203 followers and is following 207 people

If I just told you I was a writer/a sister/an aunt/a teacher, would that be enough? I grew up loving doorknocker earrings, fresh gym shoes, ntozake shange and MC LYTE, "In Living Color" and "20/20." I miss some of the best comedians. Some days, I feel torn between pursuing a doctoral degree and doing the most that my activist heart allows in... more »
  • Chicago, Brooklyn & just shy of Newark, NJ, USA
  • member since September 11, 2007

Reviews

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Displaying 1-10 of 71 reviews
  • How to Escape from a Leper Colony: A Novella and Stories
    • Rated 0 stars

    A lush, debut short story collection set in the Virgin Islands. I especially appreciate how she explore different points of view within several of the stories.

    tbetty wrote this review Tuesday, September 20, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • On Beauty
    • Rated 0 stars

    This book has a more linear narrative than WHITE TEETH, but I felt so engaged by how Smith gradually gets a reader invested in these characters. You want to know what happens to each of them-Kiki and Howard and their children Jerome, Zora, and Levi. The story complicates when Jerome falls in love with Howard's intellectual archenemy Monty Kipps' daughter Victoria AKA Vee. When it ends quickly, Jerome returns home heartbroken. Months later, Kipps is appointed to be a part of the Black Studies Department at Wellington College where Howard teaches. Victoria enrolls in Howard's class and Kiki begins a friendship with Kipps' wife Carlene. The plot complicates with a few ancillary characters and events that pick up the momentum, but Smith's dialogue is insightful and priceless. I'm convinced that the open mic poetry spot "The Bus Stop" in this book is at least partially based on The Lizard Lounge, but I could be wrong. Basically, a retelling of E.M. Forster's HOWARD'S END.

    tbetty wrote this review Tuesday, August 30, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • Into the Beautiful North
    • Rated 0 stars

    This is the only novel I've heard of or read that prominently features my hometown of Kankakee, Illinois. In fact, the place where I had my first job (Kankakee Public Library) ends up being a pivotal location for the protagonist Nayeli. Nayeli leaves her tiny unmapped town of Tres Camarones to come to the Las Unaites and find a crew of "Seven Samurai" to help save her town from drug dealers since most of the men in her town have left for work in "el norte." This is a journey story that shows the strength of Nayeli boosted by Tía Irma and her friends Yolo, Vampi, and Tacho.

    As a sidenote, Mary-Jo Johnston and several librarians from the Kankakee Public Library were the basis for the character who helps Nayeli at the library. Detective Aurelio Garcia of Kankakee Police was the basis for the character who speaks with Nayeli and Mary-Jo.

    tbetty wrote this review Saturday, August 27, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • To Tell the Truth Freely: The Life of Ida B. Wells
    • Rated 0 stars

    I've been poring over this book for most of the summer. I was sad to put it down because it revealed so much about Wells-Barnett's character. Her persistence, her vision, and her dedication to service was often ahead of its time. This book makes this clearer than many of the other texts on her life, including her autobiography CRUSADE FOR JUSTICE. I'd like to compare it with Paula Giddings' biography, which Bay also references.

    tbetty wrote this review Friday, August 26, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • Figures of Speech ~ Sixty Ways to Turn a Phrase
    • Rated 0 stars

    A volume that covers the major rhetorical devices with classic examples that clearly illustrate each one. Where do words and phrases repeat within a sentence or a line? How do specific parts of speech create an effect within a sentence or line? How does spelling change based on omission, addition, substitution, or arrangement of the letters to create an effect? All of these questions are answered in less than 100 pages. There's a concise glossary that covers each of the terms for quick reference.

    tbetty wrote this review Tuesday, August 23, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • Black Space: Imagining Race in Science Fiction Film
    • Rated 0 stars

    Really thoughtful analysis of the presence of black characters in sci-fi. Briefly discusses afrofuturism towards the end of the book. I appreciate the discussion Nama creates around some characters taking on purportedly black characteristics and being placed in situations that are common to some black experiences.

    tbetty wrote this review Wednesday, July 6, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • The Bloody Chamber
    • Rated 0 stars

    I read this after hearing Aimee Bender talk about this book online. I may use one or two of the stories for my creative writing classes because this book is a retelling of several fairy tales with more adult undertones, including Bluebeard, Beauty and the Beast, Puss in Boots, and Red Riding Hood. It's an enjoyable read, and I'd like to look at some of her other work. It also made me think about the conventions of fairy tales and how we can shift them so the stories become more relevant.

    tbetty wrote this review Tuesday, June 14, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • Pyramid of Bone (Callaloo Poetry Series, Vol 8)
    • Rated 0 stars

    It is not very often that I wish I wrote a poem like someone else's, much less an entire book of poems. Thylias Moss' second book is phenomenal and clearly a progression into her later work. Highly recommend this book.

    tbetty wrote this review Friday, May 27, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • Tokyo Butter: Poems
    • Rated 0 stars

    An elegy comprised of long poems for Moss' cousin Deidre. These poems move with intense, varied allusions that move a reader through the many directions of memory. The last poem shifts in and out of thinking about Deidre, but Moss utilizes fragments found on Google to expound on certain concepts and objects that pop up throughout the speaker's thoughts on Deidre.

    tbetty wrote this review Monday, May 23, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
  • The War of Art
    • Rated 0 stars

    Some helpful thoughts on dealing with Resistance when it comes to reaching your goals as a writer or artist.

    tbetty wrote this review Monday, April 11, 2011. ( reply | permalink )
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Displaying 1-10 of 71 reviews