deerstalker

https://blacknerdproblems.com/a-review-of-minus-shows-a-great-start-but-dull-finish/

Author: Lisa Naffziger / Iron Circus Comics

In the opening chapter of Naffziger’s Minus, there is an intimate sense of familiarity. I’m a little more than a decade apart from the days when my family was taking me to college, but watching Beck’s in the passenger seat of a car travel across the plain planes of Illinois as her father takes her to her first year of college, it elicited a particular sympathetic response. An understanding of a young teen ready to leave the shelter of home and family in an attempt to start fresh. A kinship with Beck carrying a stuffed cat named Minus, the novel’s namesake, around as a reminder of simpler times during the weird transition. The shared panic when Beck finds herself alone in a gas station after hearing gunshots and her dad is no where to be found.

Minus is a graphic novel told in six chapters about Beck that follows her in the aftermath of a seemingly random shooting, as she attempts to navigate a world she is not familiar with (being home-schooled and from a small town that is widely different from the bustling city of Chicago) and figure out what happened to her father.

Beck’s crash course to the wider world unfolds in a steady set of stages that transform the typical coming-of-age transitional story into a coming-of-age thriller. Beck’s hesitant moves throughout the world feel realistic and easily replicated, which is to say, I could very conceivably see a teen with a similar background to Beck respond in a very similar manner, and I appreciate that.

As the story progressed though, I struggle with the execution of certain narrative beats. There certain meetings that felt just a tad bit contrived and a broke suspension of disbelief just a tad by how interconnected everyone was by the end. And this isn’t necessarily an indictment, because sometimes life really does take place in a small world, and Minus does provide some interesting commentary on how that becomes the case thanks to social media and the lack of it. But there are explanations that take too long to get clarification on, explanations that don’t feel satisfying, and I was a little uncomfortable that some of the more glaring things about the story that weren’t put in focus, particularly the fact that Beck, by all appearances, is not white and there are implications there. There are plot points that seemingly gloss over this fact, and end of the graphic novel barrels through some exposition at a ridiculous pace that it’s hard to parse completely.

Credit where credit is do, the book’s art is incredible. Naffziger’s illustration skills are poignant, and the book is visually interesting all the way throughout. But the narrative hook, the driving force of the novel left me with a litany of questions and wondering what exactly were the main takeaways about the nature of family that is presented in Minus. More than anything else, I was just confused by the final two chapters, by the creative and tonal decisions that were made.

It’s odd. I was hooked by the premise, and that opening sequence that started the story, but by the end I mostly felt my face contorting wondering where exactly everything went off the rails.

7.0 “Stuffed Cat Toys” out of 10

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The post A Review of ‘Minus’ Shows a Great Start but Dull Finish appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.

July 1, 2020

A Review of ‘Minus’ Shows a Great Start but Dull Finish

https://blacknerdproblems.com/a-review-of-minus-shows-a-great-start-but-dull-finish/

Author: Lisa Naffziger / Iron Circus Comics

In the opening chapter of Naffziger’s Minus, there is an intimate sense of familiarity. I’m a little more than a decade apart from the days when my family was taking me to college, but watching Beck’s in the passenger seat of a car travel across the plain planes of Illinois as her father takes her to her first year of college, it elicited a particular sympathetic response. An understanding of a young teen ready to leave the shelter of home and family in an attempt to start fresh. A kinship with Beck carrying a stuffed cat named Minus, the novel’s namesake, around as a reminder of simpler times during the weird transition. The shared panic when Beck finds herself alone in a gas station after hearing gunshots and her dad is no where to be found.

Minus is a graphic novel told in six chapters about Beck that follows her in the aftermath of a seemingly random shooting, as she attempts to navigate a world she is not familiar with (being home-schooled and from a small town that is widely different from the bustling city of Chicago) and figure out what happened to her father.

Beck’s crash course to the wider world unfolds in a steady set of stages that transform the typical coming-of-age transitional story into a coming-of-age thriller. Beck’s hesitant moves throughout the world feel realistic and easily replicated, which is to say, I could very conceivably see a teen with a similar background to Beck respond in a very similar manner, and I appreciate that.

As the story progressed though, I struggle with the execution of certain narrative beats. There certain meetings that felt just a tad bit contrived and a broke suspension of disbelief just a tad by how interconnected everyone was by the end. And this isn’t necessarily an indictment, because sometimes life really does take place in a small world, and Minus does provide some interesting commentary on how that becomes the case thanks to social media and the lack of it. But there are explanations that take too long to get clarification on, explanations that don’t feel satisfying, and I was a little uncomfortable that some of the more glaring things about the story that weren’t put in focus, particularly the fact that Beck, by all appearances, is not white and there are implications there. There are plot points that seemingly gloss over this fact, and end of the graphic novel barrels through some exposition at a ridiculous pace that it’s hard to parse completely.

Credit where credit is do, the book’s art is incredible. Naffziger’s illustration skills are poignant, and the book is visually interesting all the way throughout. But the narrative hook, the driving force of the novel left me with a litany of questions and wondering what exactly were the main takeaways about the nature of family that is presented in Minus. More than anything else, I was just confused by the final two chapters, by the creative and tonal decisions that were made.

It’s odd. I was hooked by the premise, and that opening sequence that started the story, but by the end I mostly felt my face contorting wondering where exactly everything went off the rails.

7.0 “Stuffed Cat Toys” out of 10

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The post A Review of ‘Minus’ Shows a Great Start but Dull Finish appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


June 30, 2020

5 More Bookstagram Pages Book Lovers Will Want To Follow

https://blacknerdproblems.com/5-more-bookstagram-pages-book-lovers-will-want-to-follow/

We’ve been rocking with our own Bookstagram Instagram page for a while, @BNPLit, and love to share the written word for the ‘gram with book lovers. Last year, we shared some of our favorite bookstagramers with smaller followings that were rocking to the beat of their own drum, making waves with their own aesthetic and their own reading picks.

It’s a new year and as ‘Rona has locked down the world over, so many of us have found more time on our hands for our favorite past time: reading. We wanted to spotlight five more folks who are sharing the best parts of their reading adventures on Instagram. You know, for the culture!If you’re knee deep in the tags for reading material on Instagram, here are some standout pages you’ll love and want to follow too!


1.) Dos Lit Worms

Elissa and Eddie, self-described as “two Lit Worms reading and discussing all things books” are the friends I didn’t know I had. Their curated page is one to follow if you love speculative fiction and their range is diverse. They read all of our BIPOC faves from Charlie J. Eskew and Zoraida Córdova to tried and true authors in paperback like Brandon Sanders and Robin Hobb. I repeat, Elissa and Eddie have the range! Hailing from Philadelphia, the city of brotherly love, I’ve seen these two happily engage the bookstagram community and, in turn, be accepted in tothe fold.

Look they also have a dog, a corgi!!! That I’m waiting to see in more photos to come with books, maybe? (No pressure, you two) I’ve enjoyed seeing their book hauls and their visits to independent book stores like Harriet’s Bookshop and Uncle Bobbie’s Coffee & Books. For The Culture! While these two don’t just read authors of color, I know that whenever I see them pop up on the timeline, I can also count on seeing some books by us for us!


2.) Ps I Still Read You

Lydia is a reader, writer and professional fangirl operating out of Florida. In my heart, I’ve dubbed her a queen of YA in bookstagram land. Her username, @ps_I_still_read_you is a sweet reference to P.S. I Still Love You, the sequel to, To All the Boys I’ve Loved Before by Jenny Han. This endeared me to her as I recently finished reading the (fantastic!) series this year after watched the first two Netflix film adaptations. Her bookstagram is one to follow for the best that YA has to offer if you want teens of color, girls present as captains of their own ships and offerings about young people including great middle school grade books.

She’s active as a reviewer with reviews on Common Sense Media, Good reads, and her own website. Reading while Black usually goes hand in hand with activism: she’s been curating a Read Black Lit Database a crowdsourced list of books by black authors, starring black main characters that you should check out. I’ve already dubbed her as an honorary cousin, and she’s welcomed at any cookout my folks throw–you know when ‘Rona is done wrecking the world.


3.) Baker Street Shelves

This fellow reads mostly crime fiction and horror but he isn’t confined to those genres. Included in his feed are YA, graphic novels, manga, and more. You find masters of their craft like Stephen King and Jim Butcher. You’ll also find fresh takes on the famed detective Sherlock and Holmes by way of Watson and Holmes – A Study In Black and even Clare O’Dell’s Janet Watson Chronicles with Black queer women as detectives. (His username should point you in the right direction of the fandom he reps!) His mini-reviews are short but precise, with no wasted words. No flowery language. No upselling.

Personally, as a reader, I’m not big on reading much of the mystery genre, yet I acknowledge how transformative it can be and how often it gets adapted in other mediums like television and film.  Like the book in the Instagram post above, our friend often picks up reads by female authors, including them in his reading journey and I find interesting recommendations to check out from time to time. This is the bookstagram page to follow if you want reading material that touches upon the dark side of human nature but isn’t stuck there.


4.) Lulu’s Book Journey

Lulu’s Book Journey is the most family-friendly bookstagram account to follow on this list: parents and educators will eat this one up! This one follows the reading journey of precious Lulu and her mommy and it is chock full of mini reviews, adorable selfies with books and many images dedicated to history celebrating all people with a focus on Black folks and other people of color. There is no shortage of books about kids of color with cover after cover of brown and Black faces. Each month brings new activities, new important people to learn about and new worlds to find oneself in new books.

Kim, Lulu’s mom has been quoted saying, “I have learned more Black/Latinx History from reading books with Lulu than I ever learned in grade school, middle school, high school, or even college! This is why diverse books are so important because these stories are often lacking in our children’s schools.” This is most certainly in the top three in most wholesome children’s book bookstagram. It is a page I love to follow along to see Mom, Lulu and their little family including Lulu’s sisters from time to time. For additional reading, they have a website with more in depth reviews and additional info on who they are as a family unit.


5.)Books Over Brekkie

View this post on Instagram

“There’s nothing in the DNA of an African child, regardless of background, that makes him or her any less than any child who comes from any part of the world. The major difference is the opportunities you get as a child” – Sizwe Nxasana (pg. 92) ———————————————————————————- “The Other Story”, is Dr Judy Dlamini’s second book offering. In the book, Dr Dlamini sits down with African achievers across age groups and gives them a platform to tell their stories, stories that will leave you inspired and appreciate the greatness of Africans in a world where we’re seen as poor, deprived, lazy and consumers rather than creators. In her introduction, Dr Dlamini says that her purpose is to tell “the positive African story, giving voice to Africans who live a life of significance” and through this book she does just that. The stories include interviews with the late great Dr Richard Maponya, the young African achiever, Kevin Lubega, South Africa’s former First Lady, Mam’ Zanele Mbeki and her husband and founder of Kwa-Zulu Natal’s first black auditing firm, Sizwe Nxasana, among many other African heroes. #bookreview #theotherstory #bookrecommendation #leadership #blackexcellence #bookstoread #inspiration #motivation #career #development #socialdistancing #vision #heroes #bookstagram

A post shared by Books/Brekkie (@books_over_brekkie) on Apr 18, 2020 at 11:18pm PDT

So I’m not one hundred percent sure who runs the Books Over Brekkie page over on Instagram but my best guess is that it’s a fabulous Black woman with international flair who loves reading and eating! What I do know for sure is that person enjoys the written word, good breakfast and uplifting women, especially ladies belonging to the African Diaspora.

This page is full of beautifully shot photos of what’s being read, photos of orgasmic plates and bowls of what was eaten that day and photos of awesome women reading. Women who, as Maya Angelou once poetically said, are “grabbing the world by the lapels…and going out and kicking ass” in their respective careers. Follow this lovely soul if you want a touch of beauty in your feed and wouldn’t mind more Black and Brown women solidarity along with small, bite-sized reviews!


Cover Photo Credit: cottonbro from Pexels

ROLL CALL: Who are your favorite bookstagrammers? Who are the best-kept secrets that consistently give you greatness every time you venture into bookstagram land? Let us know in the comments!

Read our site’s other literature reviews on our Literature tag. Follow our bookstagram to see what we’re currently reading.

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The post 5 More Bookstagram Pages Book Lovers Will Want To Follow appeared first on Black Nerd Problems.


June 30, 2020

Meet “Karen & Ken,” the St. Louis Lawyers Who Pointed Guns at Peaceful Protesters

https://www.themarysue.com/ken-and-karen-the-worst/

Over the weekend, a couple–dubbed “Karen & Ken” by the internet–chose to brandish firearms at a large group of peaceful protesters walking by their extravagant home.

The protesters were walking to the home of the city’s mayor, Lyda Krewson, who made the heinous decision to dox some of her constituents earlier in the weekend. During a Facebook Live event, she read letters from activists criticizing her refusal to defund the city’s police department, including their names and addresses. This weekend, activists protesting a statue of Louis IX also clashed with white supremacists until the two groups were separated by the police.

What I’m saying is that protesters had a lot going on this weekend in St. Louis and they clearly couldn’t have cared less about these two people’s tacky mansion.

Twitter had a field day with these two.

In addition to pointing their guns at protesters–which is a crime–they both seem to lose track of their firearms and appear to casually and repeatedly point them at each other. Yet despite their obvious disregard for gun safety, the video also got a lot of attention from those supporting them for “protecting” themselves against people literally just walking down their street. Video of them screaming at the protesters was even retweeted by Donald Trump.

The neighborhood is reportedly a gated historical district and according to a police report (in which Ken and Karen here are listed as the victims), their street has “no trespassing” signs at its entrance. And we all know how many people see trespassing and the threat (not even the reality!) of property damage as being a crime worthy having an assault rifle pointed at you.

In addition to being highly memeable, the Ken & Karen situation is terrifying. Their actual names, as quickly uncovered by the internet, are Mark and Patricia McCloskey and they are personal injury attorneys. Patricia is a member of the Missouri Bar Association ethical review panel and a St. Louis city committee woman. Mark has represented a victim of police brutality. It would be incredibly naive to think that the views so clearly on display in that video don’t make their way into their work.

The McCloskeys would like to convince us that they care about the Black Lives Matter movement. They just cared more about a gate. Here is an actual statement made by their lawyer, via St. Louis Today:

“Their entire practice tenure as counsel (has) been addressing the needs of the downtrodden, for whom the fight for civil rights is necessary,” Watkins said. “My clients, as melanin-deficient human beings, are completely respectful of the message Black Lives Matter needs to get out, especially to whites … (but) two individuals exhibited such force and violence destroying a century-plus old wrought iron gate, ripping and twisting the wrought iron that was connected to a rock foundation, and then proceeded to charge at and toward and speak threateningly to Mr. and Mrs. McCloskey.”

Melanin. Deficient. As if this whole scenario couldn’t get any worse.

(image: screencap)
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June 29, 2020

Trump Promotes Video Of Supporter Yelling ‘White Power’

https://www.essence.com/news/trump-white-power-tweet-backlash/

On Sunday, Donald Trump retweeted a video that shows one of his supporters yelling “White power” at counterprotesters, according to the Wall Street Journal. Trump called backers who had gathered at a Florida retirement home “great people.” That tweet has since been deleted.

According to a White House spokesman, the impeached president did not hear what the White supremacist shouted on the video before tweeting it out. However, the alleged misstep does little to help an image already plagued by numerous and persistent instances of racism. 

On Sunday morning, Tim Scott, the only Black Republican in the Senate, appeared on CNN’s State of the Union and denounced Trump’s actions saying, “There’s no question: He should not have retweeted it; he should just take it down.” He also called the tweet “indefensible.”  

screenshot of Donald Trump's tweet that shares footage of a supporter screaming "white power"On Sunday, Donald Trump tweeted in support of the men and women who gathered to cheer on his 2020 reelection. In the clip, one of his supporters shouts “White power.”

Twitter sleuths identified the man in the video as a retired Miami firefighter Roger Stokes. According to the local news outlet, the video was taken of him and other supporters at The Villages retirement home in Florida on June 14. The video accompanied a story about the Villagers for Trump golf cart rally that took place in The Villages to celebrate Trump’s birthday.

The white supremacist racist in this clip shouting ‘White power’ is a retired @CityofMiamiFire firefighter, named Roger Stokes.I call on the Miami Fire Department, @MiamiDadeFire + @IAFFLOCAL587 to denounce Roger Stokes and these indefensible comments.??pic.twitter.com/wQEVCAozjR

— Fernand R. Amandi (@AmandiOnAir) June 28, 2020

Sharon Sandler, a Democrat who spoke to the Village News, described the Trump supporters in the retirement community as a “cult” and suggested that a number of the people who took part in the golf cart rally were “Nazi lovers.” She stood in front of the cart driven by the man who shouted “White power” with a sign that characterized Trump as a “bigot and racist.”

On Twitter, Trump showed real enthusiasm for the people who came out to show him support, including the racist in the golf cart. “Thank you to the great people of The Villages,” he wrote in the caption accompanying the retweet of the video.  “The Radical Left Do Nothing Democrats will Fall in the Fall. Corrupt Joe is shot. See you soon!!!”

The post Trump Promotes Video Of Supporter Yelling ‘White Power’ appeared first on Essence.


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