poetry

  • It looks like I’ve rather inadvertently had a fiction-free February! No regrets, as I got to some books I was meaning to get to for a while. I also kept with my typical reading pattern of more than 50% Black authors. According to various sources, Black authors make up 5-7% of all traditionally published books;

    Read more →

  • Here we are at the start of another new year and, as I write this at the end of January, my brain and belly are swirling in the midst of what has been a turbulent two weeks in the US. I have found solace in this time, as I have in so many other times,

    Read more →

  • For the fourth consecutive year in 2024 I read over 100 books, tracking not only the titles and authors, but author demographics, as well as genre, format, and publication year. This year I also switched from Goodreads (owned by Amazon) to StoryGraph (Black and women-owned) for online tracking, though I also keep my own detailed

    Read more →

  • It’s a wrap on 2024 reading! This year I completed 128 books, including these gems: fiction powerhouses, as well as pillars in the world of cultural criticism and craft. Here are some books to put on your TBR list for 2025. 

    Read more →

  • Essays and horror and poetry, oh my! This month I had the chance to interview adoptee author, Jenny Heijun Wills about her new essay collection, Everything and Nothing at All, recently named one of Globe and Mail’s best books of 2024. The book will be widely available it the US in 2025, and I felt

    Read more →

  • I am excited to announce the Spring 2025 publication of my first chapbook! Standing atop the line between fact and fiction, life and livelihood, actor and audience, Performance Anxiety interrogates the ways in which adoptees, women, and Black bodies are called upon to perform; examining love, lust, duty, and destruction in a world without a

    Read more →

  • This September, I continued working my way through James Baldwin’s oeuvre in honor of his 100th birthday last month. I also got a jump on spooky season with three thrillers: Truman Capote’s classic, In Cold Blood (1965), Disha Bose’s Dirty Laundry (2023), and Ira Levin’s Rosemary’s Baby (1967), which I had the pleasure of reading

    Read more →

  • August 2024 Reading Recap

    “The country will not change until it re-examines itself and discovers what it really means by freedom.” James Baldwin, Nobody Knows My Name Over the past couple of years, I found myself drawn more and more to the work of James Baldwin. With his 100th birthday on August 2, I doubled down on my Baldwin

    Read more →

  • August 2, 2024 would have been James Baldwin’s 100th birthday. Inspirational author, cultural critic, and civil rights activist, Baldwin authored seven novels, and countless short stories and essays. I read several this month in honor of his birthday, and expect to read several more in August, as many organizations and institutions celebrate his work and

    Read more →

  • It was like October in May this month, as I stumbled my way into three fantastic dark and twisty novels, all drawing on historical, literary, and newsworthy inspirations to tell their stories: Grievers by Adrienne Maree Brown, a pandemic-era dystopian fiction novel set in Detroit; James by Percival Everett, a retelling of Mark Twain’s Huckleberry

    Read more →

Women with long, curly hair seated on a stoop. She is wearing an army green jacket and jeans, smiling at the camera.