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ALEXANDRIA OCASIO-CORTEZ

A lively overview of a woman working to shape the nation's future.

As part of their Queens of the Resistance series, Jones and Trotman offer an admiring look at the unexpected political career of Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez (b. 1989), a “trailblazer” who won election to Congress in 2018 representing New York’s 14th District.

“I was born in a place where your zip code determines your destiny,” Ocasio-Cortez says, referring to the Parkchester neighborhood where her father, an architect, and Puerto Rican–born mother had settled. When she was young, the family moved to Yorktown Heights, in Westchester, so she and her brother could attend better schools, and the young Alexandria found herself a minority among nearly all-white classmates. Excelling in science, she set her sights on a career in medicine, majoring in pre-med at Boston University. But after a semester abroad in Niger, where she witnessed shocking poverty, she changed her major to economics and international relations and later took an internship with Ted Kennedy, which served as “her first real-life brush with national politics.” Participating in a protest against a proposed oil pipeline at Standing Rock proved “spiritually transformative,” she said. That fight against government and corporate forces taught her a lesson about change, and she gravitated to Bernie Sanders’ campaign for president in 2016. The progressive organizations Brand New Congress and Justice Democrats tapped her to run against longtime representative Joe Crowley in the 2018 midterms. Her Puerto Rican heritage and working-class experience (cleaning homes, tending bar) earned voters’ respect, and, to her astonishment, she won. Ocasio-Cortez quickly took the spotlight, promoting the Green New Deal and speaking out about racial, economic, and immigration injustices. “Well-behaved women rarely make history,” she believes. “Justice is about making sure that being polite is not the same thing as being quiet. In fact, the most righteous thing you can do is shake the table.”

A lively overview of a woman working to shape the nation's future.

Pub Date: June 30, 2020

ISBN: 978-0-593-18985-6

Page Count: 208

Publisher: Plume

Review Posted Online: April 19, 2020

Kirkus Reviews Issue: May 15, 2020

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THE MESSAGE

A revelatory meditation on shattering journeys.

Bearing witness to oppression.

Award-winning journalist and MacArthur Fellow Coates probes the narratives that shape our perception of the world through his reports on three journeys: to Dakar, Senegal, the last stop for Black Africans “before the genocide and rebirth of the Middle Passage”; to Chapin, South Carolina, where controversy erupted over a writing teacher’s use of Between the World and Me in class; and to Israel and Palestine, where he spent 10 days in a “Holy Land of barbed wire, settlers, and outrageous guns.” By addressing the essays to students in his writing workshop at Howard University in 2022, Coates makes a literary choice similar to the letter to his son that informed Between the World and Me; as in that book, the choice creates a sense of intimacy between writer and reader. Interweaving autobiography and reportage, Coates examines race, his identity as a Black American, and his role as a public intellectual. In Dakar, he is haunted by ghosts of his ancestors and “the shade of Niggerology,” a pseudoscientific narrative put forth to justify enslavement by portraying Blacks as inferior. In South Carolina, the 22-acre State House grounds, dotted with Confederate statues, continue to impart a narrative of white supremacy. His trip to the Middle East inspires the longest and most impassioned essay: “I don’t think I ever, in my life, felt the glare of racism burn stranger and more intense than in Israel,” he writes. In his complex analysis, he sees the trauma of the Holocaust playing a role in Israel’s tactics in the Middle East: “The wars against the Palestinians and their Arab allies were a kind of theater in which ‘weak Jews’ who went ‘like lambs to slaughter’ were supplanted by Israelis who would ‘fight back.’” Roiled by what he witnessed, Coates feels speechless, unable to adequately convey Palestinians’ agony; their reality “demands new messengers, tasked as we all are, with nothing less than saving the world.”

A revelatory meditation on shattering journeys.

Pub Date: Oct. 1, 2024

ISBN: 9780593230381

Page Count: 176

Publisher: One World/Random House

Review Posted Online: Aug. 2, 2024

Kirkus Reviews Issue: Sept. 1, 2024

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TANQUERAY

A blissfully vicarious, heartfelt glimpse into the life of a Manhattan burlesque dancer.

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  • New York Times Bestseller

A former New York City dancer reflects on her zesty heyday in the 1970s.

Discovered on a Manhattan street in 2020 and introduced on Stanton’s Humans of New York Instagram page, Johnson, then 76, shares her dynamic history as a “fiercely independent” Black burlesque dancer who used the stage name Tanqueray and became a celebrated fixture in midtown adult theaters. “I was the only black girl making white girl money,” she boasts, telling a vibrant story about sex and struggle in a bygone era. Frank and unapologetic, Johnson vividly captures aspects of her former life as a stage seductress shimmying to blues tracks during 18-minute sets or sewing lingerie for plus-sized dancers. Though her work was far from the Broadway shows she dreamed about, it eventually became all about the nightly hustle to simply survive. Her anecdotes are humorous, heartfelt, and supremely captivating, recounted with the passion of a true survivor and the acerbic wit of a weathered, street-wise New Yorker. She shares stories of growing up in an abusive household in Albany in the 1940s, a teenage pregnancy, and prison time for robbery as nonchalantly as she recalls selling rhinestone G-strings to prostitutes to make them sparkle in the headlights of passing cars. Complemented by an array of revealing personal photographs, the narrative alternates between heartfelt nostalgia about the seedier side of Manhattan’s go-go scene and funny quips about her unconventional stage performances. Encounters with a variety of hardworking dancers, drag queens, and pimps, plus an account of the complexities of a first love with a drug-addled hustler, fill out the memoir with personality and candor. With a narrative assist from Stanton, the result is a consistently titillating and often moving story of human struggle as well as an insider glimpse into the days when Times Square was considered the Big Apple’s gloriously unpolished underbelly. The book also includes Yee’s lush watercolor illustrations.

A blissfully vicarious, heartfelt glimpse into the life of a Manhattan burlesque dancer.

Pub Date: July 12, 2022

ISBN: 978-1-250-27827-2

Page Count: 192

Publisher: St. Martin's

Review Posted Online: July 27, 2022

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