Black Horror, Historical Fiction & Sci-fi: let’s get into it! đ

The Between by Tananarive Due #ColorMeObsessed (Harper Perennial, 1995) Horror
*content warning: death/grief, threats of racial violence
I was excited to dive into this revered classic in Black Horror, familiar with Due primarily by word-of-mouth and from her work on the Horror Noire documentary (free on Shudder, go watch! Right now!) Simply putâthis book is terrifying. The night terrors are visceral; my heart rate increased as I read. The racial violence is (unfortunately) still palpable over twenty years post-publication. And Hilton is almost a perfect character to focus on from his traumatic childhood to his seemingly idyllic family life gilding a fraught marriage. Due crafts an engrossing story with a writing style that deftly pulls you into Hiltonâs disintegrating mental state. Like Hilton, we have no idea which moments are real and which are a dream, memory, or mangled recollection. There are also the added spiritual and cultural aspects brought to us by believable characters and subtle imagery. As a Black horror fan, my only disappointment is that itâs taken me this long to touch one of Dueâs classicsâcanât wait to catch up on her catalog!
Homegoing by Yaa Gyasi #ColorMeObsessed (Vintage, 2016) Historical Fiction
*content warning: death/grief, slavery, sexual assault, violence, drug use
I know I am very late to the Homegoing party but it is still a magnificent one! Gyasiâs masterpiece follows two related genealogies through eight generations from Ghana in the 1600s to modern day America, skipping stones over the intricacies of inter-Ghanaian slave trade, political violence, and addiction. As dark as the settings and themes may be, Gyasiâs talent lies in her empathetic writing; she wraps the ongoing, interconnected narrative in absorbing vignettes, snapshots in the lives of the sixteen different characters whose motivations and dreams are timelessly human. I especially appreciated the subtle cultural developments we watch as the lineages continue over time; as a Black American, it was a treat to watch the Ghanaian dialects become African-American Vernacular English over a few decades, eventually becoming the language I speak and love today. Gyasiâs narrative smoothly prompts us to observe what evolves and what remains over time, how events shift tradition and intergenerational memory. Truly a rich, moving novel.
The Other Black Girl by Zakiya Dalila Harris #NothingToSeeHere (Simon & Schuster, 2021) Science Fiction
*content warning: police shooting
This novel was dizzyingly unimpressive. What perhaps could have been a unique political, racialized spin on The Stepford Wives was instead a messy, lengthy stew of click-bait based superficial opinions. The main character, Nella, has the personality of a 16-year old Tumblr blogger right out of 2012âso out of depth and helpless is this protagonist, and we unfortunately spend the first two thirds of the book wading through her honestly unimportant subconsciousâher memories and paranoia only serve to jumble the reader without providing much interesting content. The book was perhaps most acutely disappointing because it has the bare bones of something really fun: Harris turns a staple of Black womenâs existence, hair grease, into a tool of villainy, the antagonist, Hazel, is easy to hate, an obvious and ruthless bully, and thereâs a shiny conspiracy theory to tickle our imaginations. But without any interesting fodder to pull these facets together, they remain as misplaced and useless as Nella. Alas, the true villain here is Harrisâ heavy-handed writing. I canât help but wonder who on Earth was this book written for? Is it meant to probe the science fiction buffs? The well-meaning White reader? Is this meant to be entertainment or a lesson? Itâs unclear what Harris wanted to say here besides âlook how hard it is to be Black in corporate America,â but baby everyone already knows thatâŚ
Believing: Our Thirty-Year Journey to End Gender Violence by Anita Hill #NothingToSeeHere (Penguin Random House, 2021) Non-Fiction
*content warning: sexual assault, sexual harassment, stalking, verbal harassment
This book is especially outside of my wheelhouseâI avoid reading non-fiction in my free time, but my book club chose this book and I was eager to join the discussion. This was my first time reading Hill, and I think sheâs an accessible writerâshe made the data and content easy to understand and seemed to invite the reader into dialogue with her by differentiating her personal opinions from general political interpretations. I also appreciated her candid retelling of her famous congressional testimony, as I canât imagine anyone picking up this book and not being interested in hearing her opinions of the experience and aftermath. Despite these boons, I found her argument unconvincing based on the evidence she presented. This wasnât a terribly bad read, it also just wasnât a terribly good one.
Uzumaki: Spiral into Horror by Junji Ito (VIZ Media, 2010) Horror
*content warning: gore, body horror
Ito is the author who provoked my interest in horror manga; Iâve been reading his comics online for years and his work is always frightening. The Uzumaki collection falls in line thereâless psychological than some of his other works, I would describe the drawings and concepts themselves as the most jarring aspects of this series. Loosely held together by the premise of âa town overrun by spirals,â each subsequent story shows a bizarre and wicked degradation of reality as humanity, flesh and space itself are carved away. Itoâs drawings are nightmare-fuel.
And that wraps another #FastFive Have you read any of these books? Have a recommendation to share? Drop a comment & share your thoughts! đŹ
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homegoing sounds so intriguing!
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I’d definitely recommend it; Yaa Gyasi weaves a great tale. Thanks for reading my review! đ
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