Review by Booklist Review
An African American minister, trapped in his flipped car, reminisces about his estranged son. A ghost talker who collects unhappy spirits yearns for the ghost of the person she loves most. These are a few of the unforgettable characters peopling this rich banquet of tales by African American, Latinix, Indigenous, and Asian storytellers. Diverse in styles and settings as well as author ethnicity, Baker's selections include love stories, ghost stories, crime fiction, fantasy, and horror. There are immigrants trying to reconnect to their culture of origin and others in flight from it. There are tales set in big cities and bayous, Nigeria and New York, New Orleans and Nebraska. While the collection includes familiar names like Alexander Chee and Jason Reynolds, Baker also gives space to the fresh voices of Allison Mills, Carleigh Baker, Nana Ekua Brew-Hammond, and Hasnathika Sirisena. Baker's anthology is a delight and highly recommended for cross-cultural collections.--Williams, Lesley Copyright 2010 Booklist
From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review
The mission statement of this anthology composed of works by writers of color is that their stories "speak to experience, loss, fulfillment, and also being at that fork in the road where decisions must be made yet are not always pursued due to moral fortitude." The collection contains offerings from both established authors like Yiyun Li and Mitchell S. Jackson, and emerging talents such as Dennis Norris II and Brandon Taylor. Standouts include Allison Mills's "If a Bird Can Be a Ghost," about a young girl who learns more from her grandmother than just her ghost-busting abilities, and Carleigh Baker's "Chins & Elbows," a story that puts a recovering addict, her well-meaning friend, and an inmate doing time for a violent crime together on a trip to protect the local salmon population. Though some may wish for some greater variation in form and genre in the stories, this is an excellent sampling of some of the most exciting voices in literature from the past two decades and beyond that will leave readers with plenty of authors to revisit or discover. (Aug.) © Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved.
(c) Copyright PWxyz, LLC. All rights reserved
Review by Kirkus Book Review
Short fiction from a diverse array of writers of color.Gathering both emerging and established voices, editor Baker has produced a vital anthology whose strength lies in its unwillingness to commit to a single genre or style. Some of the stories, like Courttia Newland's creepy science-fiction adventure "Link," are explicitly political. Newland tells the story of Aaron, a black British college student who possesses mysterious psychic abilities. On the eve of the 2016 Brexit referendum, he encounters other young people of color with similar abilities; soon, they face the temptation of using their powers to punish those who would exclude them. Other stories, like Glendaliz Camacho's haunting "Long Enough to Drown," are less explicitly political. Camacho concerns herself with the particular textures of an Afro-Latinx woman's romantic longing for her dead boyfriend's brother. Brandon's racehe is a white Irish man, "quite the trophy to bring home," as the narrator saysraises important questions about what drives desire. Alexander Chee's "Mine" follows a young gay son of Korean immigrants. Perhaps the most surprising entry comes from Brandon Taylor: His lyrical "Boy/Gamin" follows a young white boy from childhood to adolescence. Written in the urgency of the present tense, the story tracks Jackson's struggle to accommodate his budding desire for other boys. One of those love interests is a young black boy named Eric, about whom Jackson has vivid fantasies. While floating off the Montgomery, Alabama, shore, "he imagines he can feel Eric's fingers on his stomach...he sees Eric's face, long and angular like a dog's, black skin everywhere, green eyes staring over thick lashes. He's beautiful and skinny and Jackson wants to punch him in the nose to make him ugly." This sentence displays the audacious complexity of Taylor's prose as he straddles the confusion of adolescent desire, emerging queerness, and racial difference. Not every story works: Jason Reynolds' "African-American Special" relies too heavily on voice, while Yiyun Li's "A Sheltered Woman" suffers for not having enough space to unfold the mysteries that accumulate around Chinese immigrant Auntie Mei.This is a vital, riveting anthology that emphasizes the complexity and diversity of minority experience. Copyright Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.