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Shannon Gibney

    La scrittura di Shannon Gibney approfondisce le complesse intersezioni di razza, classe e sessualità, traendo ispirazione da giganti letterari come James Baldwin. È impegnata a rivelare verità liberatorie attraverso la sua prosa, affrontando argomenti pericolosi con un misto di onestà bruciante e bellezza metaforica. Il lavoro di Gibney è profondamente informato dalle sue esperienze personali e dal suo impegno nelle comunità nere e nel giornalismo. Sia nella narrativa che nella saggistica, si sforza di promuovere conversazioni sincere e profonde.

    The Girl I Am, Was, and Never Will Be
    See No Color
    Dream Country
    When We Become Ours
    • When We Become Ours

      • 352pagine
      • 13 ore di lettura

      Two teens take the stage and find their voice. . . A girl learns about her heritage and begins to find her community. . . A sister is haunted by the ghosts of loved ones lost. . . There is no universal adoption experience, and no two adoptees have the same story. This anthology for teens edited by Shannon Gibney and Nicole Chung contains a wide range of powerful, poignant, and evocative stories in a variety of genres. These tales from fifteen bestselling, acclaimed, and emerging adoptee authors genuinely and authentically reflect the complexity, breadth, and depth of adoptee experiences. This groundbreaking collection centers what it’s like growing up as an adoptee. These are stories by adoptees, for adoptees, reclaiming their own narratives.  With stories

      When We Become Ours
    • Dream Country

      • 368pagine
      • 13 ore di lettura

      Spanning two centuries and two continents, Dream Country is the story of five generations of young people caught in a spiral of death and exile between Liberia and the United States--

      Dream Country
    • See No Color

      • 192pagine
      • 7 ore di lettura

      Alex has always identified herself as a baseball player, the daughter of a winning coach, but when she realizes that is not enough she begins to come to terms with her adoption and her race

      See No Color