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This is for books and Western comics only; manga and manhwa get a separate post.

Thoughts about the year in books )

Amazingly, I managed to blog about every single book I read this year! I didn't link the full list, but you can always look in my tags or memories.

The below are my favorites out of all the books I read this year, not books published this year.

  1. Emily Bernard, Some of My Best Friends )

  2. Emma Donoghue, Kissing the Witch )

  3. Ursula K. Le Guin, Voices )

  4. Megan Lindholm, Harpy's Flight )

  5. Laurie J. Marks, Elemental Logic series )

  6. Susan Beth Pfeffer, Life as We Knew It )

  7. Joann Sfar, The Rabbi's Cat )

  8. Ronald Takaki, Strangers from a Different Shore )

  9. Alice Walker, In Search of Our Mothers' Gardens )

  10. Elizabeth E. Wein, The Sunbird )


Also recommended: Carl Chu, Chinese Food Finder: The Bay Area and San Francisco; Brenda Dixon Gottschild, The Black Dancing Body: A Geography from Coon to Cool and Waltzing in the Dark: African American Vaudeville and Race Politics in the Swing Era; Theodora Goss, In the Forest of Forgetting; Margo Rabb, Cures for Heartbreak; Madeleine E. Robins, Point of Honour; Joanna Russ, What Are We Fighting For?: Sex, Race, Class, and the Future of Feminism; Sarah Smith, The Vanished Child; Beverly Daniel Tatum, Can We Talk about Race?: And Other Conversations in an Era of School Resegregation; Lawrence Weschler, Mr. Wilson's Cabinet of Wonder: Pronged Ants, Horned Humans, Mice on Toast, and Other Marvels of Jurassic Technology; Ysabeau S. Wilce, Flora Segunda; Helen Zia, Asian American Dreams: The Emergence of an American People

Total read: 131 (6 rereads)

Complete list of books read in 2007 )
oyceter: Stack of books with text "mmm... books!" (mmm books)
I had tried to read this around 2003, but got stuck on Alice Walker's insistence on mentioning "womanism" as a thing somewhat separate from feminism, and as a black thing at that.

I picked it up again last week to alleviate some of the anger I was still feeling about the whole cultural appropriation debate stuff. This time, instead of feeling left out or excluded, I found so much comfort in her knowledge that often feminism fails to address racial issues (and class issues, but that's a whole 'nother post). It isn't that the failures of feminism comfort me; they don't. Feminism is one of the axes of my existence, and while I think the Platonic version would address race and class, in practice, it often doesn't. And I find myself torn between feminism and anti-racism, both of which are very important to me, and that's a very uncomfortable place to be.

It feels as though Alice Walker wrote many of these essays about that divide, specifically to address that divide, to say: This isn't fair. This isn't right. We deserve more. We shouldn't be forced to choose.

There's such a sense of strength in these essays, even when Walker's writing about being insulted by all sorts of people for being black, for being female, for being herself. She feels centered and fully aware of herself; she writes about moments of joy as well as moments of pain, and her anger comes from injustice. From this book, I would love to just sit down and talk with her. She finds strength even in the midst of suicidal despair.

I can't even start to say how much I loved this, and I suspect many of these essays will be reread through the years and grow to be close friends.

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