The Bronx is Reading March Book Club - Mira Jacob
The Bronx is Reading March Book Club - Mira Jacob
#TheBronxisReading Book Club Pick for March is: Good Talk by Mira Jacob.
Join us for our March #TBIR Book Club meeting at the Andrew Freedman Home Library on Saturday, March 28, 2020. This is a ticketed event, you must purchase a ticket to attend. The author will join us in person for an engaging discussion.
About this Event
#TheBronxisReading Book Club Pick for March is: Good Talk by Mira Jacob.
Join us for our March #TBIR Book Club meeting at the Andrew Freedman Home Library on Saturday, March 28, 2020. This is a ticketed event, you must purchase a ticket to attend. The author will join us in person for an engaging discussion.
About the Book
“Who taught Michael Jackson to dance?”
“Is that how people really walk on the moon?”
“Is it bad to be brown?”
“Are white people afraid of brown people?”
Like many six-year-olds, Mira Jacob’s half-Jewish, half-Indian son, Z, has questions about everything. At first they are innocuous enough, but as tensions from the 2016 election spread from the media into his own family, they become much, much more complicated. Trying to answer him honestly, Mira has to think back to where she’s gotten her own answers: her most formative conversations about race, color, sexuality, and, of course, love.
How brown is too brown?
Can Indians be racist?
What does real love between really different people look like?
Written with humor and vulnerability, this deeply relatable graphic memoir is a love letter to the art of conversation—and to the hope that hovers in our most difficult questions.
About the Author
Mira Jacob is the author and illustrator of Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations. Her critically acclaimed novel, The Sleepwalker’s Guide to Dancing, was a Barnes & Noble Discover New Writers pick, shortlisted for India’s Tata First Literature Award, and longlisted for the Brooklyn Literary Eagles Prize. It was named one of the best books of 2014 by Kirkus Reviews, the Boston Globe, Goodreads, Bustle, and The Millions. Her writing and drawings have appeared in The New York Times, Electric Literature, Tin House, Literary Hub, Guernica, Vogue, the Telegraph, and Buzzfeed, and she has a drawn column on Shondaland. She currently teaches at The New School, and she is a founding faculty member of the MFA Program at Randolph College. She is the co-founder of Pete’s Reading Series in Brooklyn, where she spent 13 years bringing literary fiction, non-fiction, and poetry to Williamsburg. She lives in Brooklyn with her husband, documentary filmmaker Jed Rothstein, and their son.