Reviews

Black Cool: One Thousand Streams of Blackness by Rebecca Walker

africanbookaddict's review against another edition

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... thoughts to come later

zazawalmsley614's review against another edition

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dark emotional inspiring fast-paced

4.0

missberlyreads's review against another edition

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informative reflective medium-paced

4.0

nnekajax's review against another edition

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3.0

Was slow in some places but overall a powerful read.

glendareads39's review against another edition

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4.0

Black Cool: One Thousand Streams of Blackness is an inspiring and empowering book of perspectives on what is Black Cool. Originally published in 2012. The writers who contributed to this essay collection Professor/Author Bell Hooks, writer/filmmaker Dream Hampton, Fashion legend Michaela Angela Davis, Visual artist Hawk Willis Thomas, photographer Dawoud Bey, and many more. I recommend everyone reading Black Cool.

"Because, Black People, we are a posse, a tribe, a collective, a crew. We know we are better together. We know our power lies in the sameness of our situation and the difference of our stories, but at the end of the day: this Us-ness, wherever we find it, is how we roll best. Don't forget who can love into wholeness."-Rebecca Walker

poenaestante's review against another edition

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5.0

I read this book as part of an ongoing meditation on the tech industry and appropriation of hip-hop and black male swagger (despite the exclusion/erasure of black bodies). The gorgeous pieces in this book make so many of the points I wish to make. Now I need only draw the lines from there to here. bell hooks, Mat Johnson, Staceyann Chinn, and so many others paint the many hues of black cool, big and bold, yet subtle and precise.

This book is absolute perfection from beginning to end. I am grateful that my frustration with this phenomenon in my industry lead me to seek out perspectives on what it means to be black and cool and better understand why others reify it while at the same time "trying us on like costumes before discarding our bodies like rinds of strange fruit" (Thanks, Jesse Williams).

I'm definitely gonna buy it so I have it as a reference. I'm certain I will need to pick it up many more times and will definitely be gifting it to friends and family. If you've taken Adichie's admonition to be wary of the single story, you'd do well to pick this up and immerse yourself in the great (and impossibly cool) multitudes.

serialreader's review against another edition

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challenging emotional informative inspiring reflective fast-paced

5.0

saiita's review

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Nothing wrong with the book, just lost interest in reading it. 

qa31's review against another edition

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3.0

3.5

Some really interesting essays in this book but most importantly it gave me an idea that I hope I can run with.

onecrab's review against another edition

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5.0

To quote the reviewer Zanna, "This book is not about me or for me; it doesn't need me and it doesn't care what I think, and as well as being about terrible things that haven't and cannot happen to me, it's kind of about wonderful things I can't have. This is a humbling thing."

I loved this book. I wish I could tell you my favorite essay or story, but I can't choose. Each one stood out on its own for its own merits and excellence. I wrote down so many quotes from the writers. I looked up so many new (to me) things on google - artists, ideas, times, places. It's a beautiful collection of people and their voices.
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