by: Sam Rivas, Contributor & Guest Author
De-Canon contemplates the complexities of things we might think about on Mother’s Day, highlighting a few books by women writers of color on motherhood, mothering, mothers, and inheritance. Below are my favorite glimpses of The Breaks by Julietta Singh, Guidebook to Relative Strangers: Journeys into Race, Motherhood, and History by Camille T. Dungy, and Bring Down the Little Birds by Carmen Giménez Smith.
Being a daughter to a mother who is 843 miles away, has reminded me of my newborn self—calling every hour and crying to be fed words of reassurance. I am pregnant for the first time and each of these books feels like a Bible designed to understand mothers. They are gems of wisdom holding space in a world that typically focuses on the ugly of motherhood.
Read More
Our stay at Mile Post 5 has been a phenomenal experience. We have enjoyed having a large space to ourselves in which we’ve been able to not only exhibit the entire (and continually expanding) collection of books, but create a space where we’ve hosted readings, offered writing workshops, provided room for meetings, and enabled writers and artists of color to interact with each other, as well as the local community. Here’s an overview of what' we’ve done this summer.