We almost named this one "The One About What We've Been Up To For 10 Months". Haha, hey beautiful people! We're back!
Businesses Mentioned:
Here We Grow and BerrionlBerry
Organisations Mentioned:
FEMINITT, I'm Glad I'm A Girl
Books Mentioned:
Fearing the Black Body: The Racial Origins of Fat Phobia by Sabrina Strings (Rebel Women Lit's March & April book club pick)
Black on Both Sides: A Racial History of Trans Identity by C. Riley Snorton
Period Power: A Manifesto for the Menstrual Movement by Nadya Okamoto
The Green Witch: Your Complete Guide to the Natural Magic of Herbs, Flowers, Essential Oils, and More (Green Witch Witchcraft Series) by Arin Murphy-Hiscock
A short discussion on Jamaica's reading culture, Read Across Jamaica and how the Jamaican libraries are... kind of a mess. Who's up for a #JamaicaReads campaign?
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One of our favourite kinds of literature is poetry. Its ability to hold the weight of histories, the gamut of human emotions and philosophies in a mere few lines is just *chef's kiss*.
Now we’re not saying we’re poets...but much like poetry, this new episode is short and sweet. For National Reading Day (celebrated annually on May 4th), we talk about the barriers to a loving relationship with recreational reading and how the Jamaica Library Service's weird rules, such as owning a library card, is a part of that problem (and of course so much more).
It's the perfect episode to listen to while you detangle your hair or make yourself some breakfast.
Stay Lit 🌷
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We’re deep into 2020 now, and both the days and the years to come, look darker than they have in a very long time. No, we’re not just talking about COVID-19. So why not curl up with an appropriate book? Join our verandah chat with Diana McCaulay, author of Daylight Come, a tense futuristic sci-fi story about climate change in the Caribbean.
What makes McCaulay's latest book so remarkable is how terrifyingly realistic she makes the details of the world she builds for her characters, and her readers, to inhabit. In this podcast, we talk about Daylight Come, how she prophecies through fiction writing, her craft, inspiration and the book that made her cry & become a writer.
Purchase Daylight Come at RebelWomenLit.com/DaylightCome
Support our book club & podcast: patreon.com/rebelwomenlit
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