
I just love a book of connected short stories. And I remember watching the mini-series of this way back when.
I just love a book of connected short stories. And I remember watching the mini-series of this way back when.
"hard-edged, soft-centered, brutally demanding, and easily pleased" ?
Finally reading this book.
Thank you Mindi! You've spoiled me! A whole box of Godiva chocolates plus a book! Best kind of present!Thank you!! Thank you!! And thanks again @MaleficentBookDragon
#jolabokaflodswap
@Bookishgal71
Thinking of the #19822022 challenge hosted by @Librarybelle (I'll start it the first day after my 39th birthday which is on the 29th of Dec) I might pick this book as the first one...
#GratefulHarvest - Porch: The Women of Brewster Place. Inner-city tenement housing. A dead-end street. A group of black women trying to hold on to life or at least a resemblance to ordinary living. Fighting to survive the crap that rolls downhill and lands in the laps of the poor and the disenfranchised and more often than not, women.ππ½
Naylor weaves together the stories of seven women living in Brewster Place, a bleak-inner city sanctuary, creating a powerful, moving portrait of the strengths, struggles, and hopes of black women in America. Vulnerable and resilient, openhanded and openhearted, these women forge their lives in a place that in turn threatens and protectsβa common prison and a shared home. Unforgettable!
The penultimate chapter of this remarkable bk has left me devastated. The storytelling about 7 women's lives in a new York housing block is wonderfully written, capturing the humour,frustration,and relationships of the individuals, giving voice to their experiences which are varied and unique. The prose also was wonderful, it is not often that I stop my reading at a sentence but I did in this book which I feel want to reread straight away.
I picked this up tonight and have just put down the first story about Mattie Michael. I know I am going to love this book and it will be one I want to keep reading but also savour. I just can't remember where I heard about it, I think it was referenced by a guest on either the women's prize podcast or the virago podcast.
I just bought this for kindle for $3.99 I wanted to buy the paper copy but my mom told me not to which was great advice because now #Stormy is sick. I can‘t take her to the vet until tomorrow please pray and send good vibes or do whatever you do. Thanks. I love you all!!! β€οΈβ€οΈβ€οΈπππ
#ReadSoulLit - Black Love: There was all matter of love in this book: good love, bad love, lousy love, decaying love, hoped for love, betrayed love, community love, I-Got-You love, sistah love, mama love and most importantly love of self.
What makes love vulnerable? What makes love resilient? What allows love a second & even third chance? When should love say goodbye and good riddance? Why doesn‘t love fight to stay? When can love come back?ππ½
This...all of this. The characters not only jump off the page but grab you and pull you back into the story with them.
I struggle with books labeled "women's stories" that are stories of abusive men and how they destroy women. Dehumanizes men (are all men monsters?) and women (women's stories are about men) at the same time.
Brewster's Place does not do this. It has the gendered abuser/victim dichotomy, but also very movingly writes about sisterhood and the women themselves.
Also addressing abuse is important.
Loved this interconnected set of stories. Heartbreaking stories - of abuse, violence, neglect & poverty, coupled with resilience, wisdom, strength & moral character - women as fighters and survivors. There's a feeling of hidden mysticism around the women and their effect on the universe. Written with compassion, lyrical eye for detail these glimpses into the life of these characters leaves you wanting to spend much more time with them all.
I gave this a so-so because the end wasn‘t satisfying. There wasn‘t really a resolution. The book was about the women and their lives, the courage they showed and what brought them to that place. The end was like, βwell, who mourns streets when they die?β I understand that part of this book was to see the underlying issues, it could even be about gentrification in the end, but it could‘ve been handled better.
Gorgeous writing! Powerful, enriching, heartbreaking stories. Gloria Naylor is another "better late than never" writer introduced to me since joining the bookstagram community.
Another day, another brilliant collection of connected short stories surrounding a common place and theme.
#riotgrams
Black writers, women edition. β€οΈ
I had an English prof who compared certain types of stories to pounding on your thumb with a hammerβbecause it feels so good when you stop. He meant it in a good way. This book is like that. Gloria Naylor generally rips my heart out & dances on top of it, and then I thank her for it. These seven interconnected stories were beautiful and wrenching and so well-done. Recommended. If you‘re OK with the aforementioned hammering on your thumb.
Ain‘t nothing to be shamed of. Havin‘ a baby is the most natural thing there is. The Good Book call children a gift from the Lord. And there ain‘t no place in that Bible of his that say babies is sinful. The sin is the fornicatin‘, and that‘s over and done with. God done forgave you of that a long time ago, and what‘s going on in your belly now ain‘t nothin‘ to hang your head aboutβyou remember that.
Sick day plans. This would look like a glorious day... if I weren‘t sick! π€πβοΈ
I fell in love with the recently-departed Gloria Naylor through these interconnected stories. Lesser writers leave clichés leaden and unexplored on the page; here, the stereotypes of African-American women's lives are transfigured into fresh truthsβjoyous and tragicβabout race, gender, class, and sexuality: story-truths that go deep, speak volumes.
"Hush your fussing"βthat went right inside me and just watch me insert it into conversation whenever appropriate from here on in! ?
#QuoteOfTheDay
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#QuoteOfTheDay
I was incredibly moved by these interconnecting stories of women who have ended up in Brewster Place. The final story brought me to tears. It covers a wide range of black women's experiences - featuring women of different generations, sexual orientations, regions, classes. She is able to cover decades of experiences in each story and smoothly shifts time periods from one paragraph to the next. Highly recommend. #womenslit #diversebooks
At the beach so using the same book two days in a row. Plus, Mattie and Etta's friendship is perfect for #girlfriends. These two women have each other's backs through it all. #anditsaugust #littenonvacation
This book, which was my pick for book club this month is #mostanticipated #augustsmostanticipated. I'm a third of the way through and it is meeting my expectations so far. #backtoreading #anditsaugust.
Proud supporter of We Need Diverse Books!!
#24in48 #readathon #wndb
This is the best book I've read this year. Every woman's story stopped my heart.
It's the story of seven women living in a run down block and how they each came to that point in their lives. With tragedy and joy and friendship and betrayal.
If you love Toni Morrison you really should try this in my opinion. Not the same - but the power to put you very quickly inside another life is there. A lot packed in to 198 pages.
This is unbelievably good. 50 pages in and I'm π³π³π³ this is heart wrenching and beautiful and Naylor uses narrative techniques I haven't seen before and I'm floored.
Had to stop and remind myself to breathe!
She's taken to warming my feet while the hubs is nearby playing D&D over skype. ππ #catsoflitsy #littenkitten #LoonyLuna
Trying to start a new adventure this morning, but someone wants to snuggle #catsoflitsy #littenkitten #LoonyLuna
I really loved this "novel in stories" about women who love, lose, learn, and try their best to keep it together in a lower income neighborhood in an unnamed city. So well written, too. I don't think Naylor always gets the recognition she definitely deserves. #Blackhistoryreads
"Sometimes being a friend means mastering the art of timing. There is a time for silence. A time to let go and allow people to hurl themselves into their own destiny. And a time to prepare to pick up the pieces when it's all over. " ~The Women of Brewster Place
This book is beautiful and brutal. Sharp and intimate. I feel as though I've been rubbed a little bit raw in the reading of it. Maybe it's affecting me so much tonight because we are living in unjust times. Being an amateur historian, I know that ALL times are unjust times.
Enough of my waffling.
Just read the book.
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#ReadDiverseBooks
Finished 8 out of 14 π from January's TBR stack plus 15 more. Still working on a couple in this stack.
The late Gloria Naylor's debut novel is So. Damn. Good. These stories, of seven different women, are so stark and beautiful and heartbreakingly real. Can't believe I haven't read this before now. Can't wait to read more of her work!!
I've got planned reading and then I run into "I've got to read everything this author wrote sometime this year." I think Gloria Naylor is taking me down path B right now. I love finding an author who interrupts my reading plans.
#currrentlyreading
#tbr
#LitsyQuiz Selection #3! So far, you're 2/2 Litsyans! Some among you knew the first 2 books. Now, how about this third title? Have you read/owned/heard of this one? πππ»
One more #creepycovers...
I love this book and own several copies, but this edition's cover is slightly creepy. The white eyes make her look like a zombie woman. Anyone agree?