Reviews tagging 'Addiction'

Now Lila Knows by Elizabeth Nunez

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bookdragon217's review

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emotional informative mysterious reflective sad tense fast-paced

4.75

"It's not about resentments. It's about righting a wrong that people have been forced to suffer for hundreds of years. It's about justice." 

Now Lila Knows by Elizabeth Nunez was a compelling and timely read. It was a reflective read that interrogated accountability, racism in academia and social justice, the disconnect between American Blacks and the Caribbean and the power dynamics at play when someone chooses to speak up. The core of the plot revolves around Lila, a Caribbean immigrant who witnessed police murder a Black professor who they perceived as harming a white woman when he was in fact performing CPR and saving her life. Lila, has to reckon with her own ideas about race, identity and race relations in the U.S. as she ponders whether she should disclose to police what she witnessed. 

I really enjoyed this one because of how relevant it is. Nunez asks us to reckon with ourselves when we see injustices happen. Who is harmed and benefits when we are silent about injustices that happen to Black people? Who speaks for the victim when witnesses stay silent? Are we willing to risk it all for equity and justice? How do we live with ourselves when we allow people to continue to be killed without calling for accountability?

Nunez also illuminates the way the institution of academia is a reflection of greater U.S. society in the ways that it calls for diversity but in reality just wants to fulfill quotas and check boxes but doesn't care about leveling the playing field or about social justice.    Academia is also a place where white supremacy goes unchecked and becomes a vehicle of oppression for BIPOC professors and students. Only when systems are challenged, can seeds of change be planted and bloom. 

Another great point that Nunez made is that all Black people of the diaspora need to be a united front in social justice movements. Decolonization is the first step to unlearning the falsehoods we've internalized. White people who call themselves "allies" need to take the lead & be responsible for cleaning up the mess that they made & not expect Black people to do the work for them. Black lives are being lost while too many remain silent. The time for action is now.

I highly recommend this one because it was such a solid read from start to finish. The writing was thoughtful and beautiful. The multiple perspectives were illuminating. Nunez is a voice that is relevant, propulsive and necessary. Everything she writes, I will read. 

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