Recommended Reading: asha bandele’s Something Like Beautiful

This 2009 release from former Essence editor asha bandele is a follow-up to her memoir The Prisoner’s Wife and recounts bandele’s experiences as a single mother combating drinking and depression.  I struggled to relate to her as the wife of a imprisoned man, then as a mother to his child, until I read this passage:

“I would have to ask myself this question, and find the heart to answer it:

Had I ever really loved myself? Had I ever handed myself over to myself, whole and complete, willing and wanting…wide open and without barrier?

…Had anything worked either its magic or science and moved me closer to the place where I could claim my own heart, my own desires, and my own needs?

Did I ever commit to myself the way I did to others, and if I didn’t then why not? And if I didn’t, is that why I found myself in my thirties still trying to stand, years after I could have sworn I had taught myself to run?” –  asha bandele, Something Like Beautiful 2009.

Whoa. 

What mother doesn’t want the absolute best for her daughter? And what daughter doesn’t – at some point – contemplate her mother’s choices as she makes her own? As the publisher’s site notes, “[Something Like Beautiful offers] a vision of hope for all women struggling to keep it together on their own.”  Don’t miss this lovely, lyrical read.

Image courtesy of HarperCollins; brief excerpt reprinted with permission

Recommended Reading: Tayari Jones’ Silver Sparrow

Ms. Jones’ tale of bigamy and sibling rivalry in 1980’s Atlanta is one of the year’s best.   Noted in this month’s O Magazine as well as Birmingham Magazine, it grips the reader from the first line to the very last.  It’s often hard to be shocked in this age of Sister Wives, Duggars ad infinitum and Kardashians on every channel, but Jones  (an Atlanta native) writes of a taboo subject with delicacy and deep understanding.  I would say more but I don’t want to give it away!  And once you finish this juicy – but not soap operatic -tale, make sure you pick up Leaving Atlanta, her debut novel.  Both are amazing, amazing books.

Silver Sparrow has deservedly been named a Semifinalist for Best Fiction in the Goodreads Readers Choice Awards; if you’ve read it and feel inclined, please vote it to the next round by clicking here (you have to sign in to Goodreads to do so).

For more on Tayari Jones, click here.

Image courtesy of amazon.com

Recommended Reading: Danielle Evans’ Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self

Before You Suffocate Your Own Fool Self/Danielle Evans

Danielle Evans’ collection of  short stories made me (almost) want to tear up every fiction piece I’ve written and totally reconsider my mission in life.  Evans writes of race, sexuality, and love with both compassion and unflinching honesty.  Best modern fiction I’ve read in a while.

Image via amazon.com

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