Read story at https://www.tor.com/2018/04/25/into-the-gray-margaret-killjoy/ .
Some other works by author pictured above.
Read story at https://www.tor.com/2018/04/25/into-the-gray-margaret-killjoy/ .
Some other works by author pictured above.
Title: Between These Sheets
Author: Atevia Robinson
Publisher: Twisted Desires Publications
Reviewed By: Arlena Dean
Rating: Four
Review:
"Between These Sheets" by Atevia Robinson
My Thoughts....
What a read by this author giving a few of us women want we really want or think we want. In the end well you will just have to see if any of this was a good decision for all involved. I will say this book will give the readers many lessons some good and some not so good definitely coming out not like it was all planned. The read will really give you something to think about long after the read. I liked how the word 'freak was described by this author. Some as a quiet freak...an undercover freak....the professional freak....the insecure freak...the pleaser type of freak, insecure freak....sneaky freak...and the cold hearted freak. Now, as I read this i was shaking my head saying WHAT but I will have to agree with this author that all of us may have a little bit of freak in us...ha ha ha! Anyway getting back to this story I will say this author really knows how to keep you turning the pages with some really interesting characters...from Sunshine, Nick [White Boy],Sway, Storm & Danny Chaser, Georgia, Douglas [Afro American], Rainy, J.C., Velvet, Jason, Ice, Preston, Boss, Nate, Tasha, Steve [Brown Eyes]. Shantel, Jesse, Mike, J Rod and I am sure I left someone out..Well, this will be somewhat a sad story where you will find a little bit of it all in it from craziness all over the place from abuse, adultery, murder, abortion, cheating, lieing, sexual content all over the place and in the end one can come to several important conclusions from this read..Abuse is never an excuse to stay with someone! Messing with a marriage man OR woman is a NO NO! If you do there will more or less be consequences to pay. A scorned woman is one not to be messed with. HIV is a serious disease and not to be taken or granted...use protection! I could go on and on from what I gathered from this read but that will be for you the reader to pick up this novel and see for yourself how this author brings it all out in this novel. I will definitely say that karma' will come sooner or later for the ones that deserved it as it did for Jason!
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I am not fucking around: this is a great Kim Stanley Robinson novel. It's got everything I like about him: a bunch of hugely nerdy digressions, some legit science, a little light-hearted didacticism, and words words words. This man can write. Ok, sure, the plot is loose, but who even needs a plot when you've got a world like this, like ours but in extremis.
I might have fallen in love with Robinson a little bit while listening to her read this amazing audiobook. I'm sure reading it for myself would have been fun but the audio was SO GOOD. It's definitely the way to go.
I also recommend reading Between the World and Me first, if you plan on reading both and haven't read that one already. Not only does she reference it at least once, but the information is complimentary without being identical and Coates's work was much more serious and gave a lot of history to both his topics and hers. That said, if you were not already going to read Between the World and Me, it is not essential to understanding this book whatsoever. Reading it first is just a recommendation from me. I read them in that order and feel like reading the funny first would have led me to not enjoy the serious as much.
I had decided that I absolutely had to read this one from the second I read the title. I have had issues with people touching my hair, though for different reasons. I get the irritation that comes with having to explain to people not to touch you. Since she is a comic by trade, I'm sure you expect this work to be funny, so I won't go on and on about how hilariously the book handled each topic. I will say that it did very much remind me of the way it has been pointed out in All the Rebel Women that it is a big part of this fourth wave of feminism that women are increasingly using humor to make our points and that the stand-up comic arena has become a feminist platform that is making headway.
I would normally tell you which essay was my favorite, but it's hard to choose. There's a moment or two in each that really makes it hard to pick a favorite. I think the one that I really need to remember the most, though, is the Angry Black Woman. I've never accused a black woman of being angry, but Robinson's issue makes perfect sense. Personally, it sounds like the dumbest thing to do because I feel like it makes a not angry person upset to call them angry but I get that it's a tactic to try to shut black women down and done for exactly this reason. I've had similar issues with other words associated with bitchy. My internal response is either "Oh, you want a bitch, you'll get one" or "WTF, that wasn't bitchy at all" and then feeling bad that something could have been offensive. I'm working on it, though, because that's a ridiculous response to someone who is also just trying to shut me down, but I didn't know that for a long time.
I'm also pretty familiar with the black friend dynamic. I've had done that to people (not proud to say I've done that to friends but it's true) and I've had people try to make me the Hispanic/Latin friend. The joke was always on them, though, because all the things people want a Latin friend for I can't do or am horrible at, like cooking Latin foods, dancing, speaking Spanish. It's become it's own source of entertainment for me. The essay on the usage of uppity was also different while being familiar. I've heard people say it before, but I'd never put it together that way and it makes so much more sense and feels like it should be obvious. As a girl who is also mixed, I particularly appreciated her letter to Olivia about being mixed and appreciating both heritages and both cultures. That was not something that I was taught growing up and I had to gradually come to appreciate my Hispanic side. It wasn't anyone's fault, just the way the insecurities of multiple people around me played out.
It's a little cute when she calls herself old because I've felt that way at work too. I'm a smidge older than her, but it's been happening since around her age at the time of her writing. Being that we are fairly contemporary, I got almost all the pop culture references. I had really started to think that I was the last person on the planet that remembered the show the West Wing, so her references to that show and C.J. Craig were especially fun for me.
I had a little bit of a book hangover when I was done and YouTubed some of her shorter video's for a while as I was trying to concentrate on writing this review. I look forward to watching/reading whatever else she does in the future and checking out her podcast 2 Dope Queens soon.