• Book of the Month,  Review

    How The Word Is Passed: Land, Buildings, Time + Space.

    “Go straight for two miles on Robert E. Lee. Take a left on Jefferson Davis. Make the first right on Claiborne.” translation: “Go straight for two miles on the general whose troops slaughtered hundreds of Black soldiers who were trying to surrender. Take a left on the president of the Confederacy, who understood the torture of Black Bodies as the cornerstone of their new nation. Make the first right on the man who allowed the heads of rebelling slaves to be mounted on stakes in order to prevent other slaves from getting any ideas.” – Clint Smith How The Word Is Passed: A Reckoning With The History of Slavery Across…

  • Review

    Bryan Stevenson’s “Just Mercy” – A review

    Bryan Stevenson is a public interest lawyer who has dedicated his entire career to the pursuit of justice through his dedication to the poor, the incarcerated (with a specific interest in the juveniles who are incarcerated), and those that are condemned to life in prison and death row. Through this dedication, he was led to the creation of the equal justice initiative (EJI), where he works as the executive director, establishing his headquarters in Montgomery, Alabama. All of this is chronicled in his book Just Mercy: A Story of Justice and Redemption, where he details not only the realities of being an African American male interested in law in America…

  • Book of the Month

    Book of the Month – Shook One: Anxiety Playing Tricks on Me.

    For the month of November, we chose the latest offering from Charlamagne Tha God, the author of the New York Times bestseller, Black Privilege. In his newest addition, Shook One, Charlamagne details his relationship with fear and anxiety, and how that relationship played a pivotal role in his life since his childhood. Like most people he’s had fears in school, relationships, and fear of not finding his way and possibly getting caught up like so many of his friends and family back home in Moncks Corner, South Carolina.  Even after achieving national prominence as a radio personality, Charlamagne still found himself paralyzed by thoughts that he isn’t going to be able to take…

  • Review

    The Obstacle is the Way – Ryan Holiday

    Ryan Holiday is the author of the bestselling Ego Is the Enemy, and Conspiracy and roots the majority of his self-help books in stoicism a school of Hellenistic philosophy heavily influenced by Socrates; however, much of what he writes is influenced by Marcus Aurelius (Meditations), a Roman emperor who reigned from 161 to 180 AD. Aside from compiling his own memoir-like writings, He also serves as the launching pad for most people’s dive into the stoic realm and Ryan creates a contemporary landscape for some of his more poignant points to live in today’s empire.  Stoicism deals heavily with an analysis of one’s own judgement of self and others in a universal perspective. This…

  • Review

    Disintegration: The Splintering of Black America – Eugene Robinson

    “‘Black America’ doesn’t live here anymore” – Eugene Robinson As the front cover of the book suggests, most African Americans feel like there was a time when there were agreed-upon “black leaders,” when there was a clear “black agenda,” when we could talk confidently about the “state of black America” – but not anymore. Disintegration: the splintering of black America is Eugene Robinson’s response to that gnawing feeling that we all feel at the backs of our necks: maybe things are different? And maybe we aren’t all occupying the same space as we once were? Eugene Robinson is an American Columnist with the Washington Post, and even before that, he was…

  • Review

    Sing, Unburied, Sing: A Review (No Spoilers)

    The memory is a living thing – it too is in transit. But during its moment, all that is remembered joins, and lives – the old and the young, the past and the present, the living and the dead. ~ Eudora Welty In this epigraph from Eudora Welty, Jesmyn Ward attempts to encapsulate the omnipresent specter that time places over the human existence and more poignantly, the African American experience. In this July’s book from the aforementioned author, we find her characters battling with the far past of Africa, the not-so-distant past of the Jim Crow Era, the dark and uncertain present, and the vastly uncertain future. This proves to…