A People, Amazon, Seattle Public Library, Read Between the Spines, Ms. Magazine, Goode Reader, Bookstr, and Publishers Lunch, "Book of the Month" * A Publishers Weekly, BookPage, BookRiot, The Millions, Medium Loc''D Booktician, Read Between the Spines, and Flyleaf Books "Most Anticipated" * A Washington Post, AARP, Garden & Gun, Literary Hub, Vulture, Zibby Owens, Atlanta Journal-Constituion, Eagle Harbor Books, Deep South Magazine, She Reads, and Tertulia "Book to Read this Summer" "To call this book exclusively nonfiction is unnecessarily reductive--like Jeffers herself, it refuses to be categorized. Instead, it leaps deftly between memoir, history, academic writing, and poetry. Across all forms and ideas, it soars.With her ''red dirt'' matrilineal line in Georgia and literary foremothers like Alice Walker and Toni Morrison, Jeffers crafts not just a history of Black women in the United States but an essential way of looking at their inheritance--one that folds familiarity into proficiency. Generous, wise, and fearless, she travels through the wounds of past and present with remarkable grace and gripping narratives" - Kirkus Reviews (starred review) "Deftly moving between sharp critique and an intimate, confessional tone, this astonishes." - Publishers Weekly (starred review) "In this genre-blurring collection, which shifts between memoir, history, and poetry, Jeffers charts her place in a line of women whose lives have been shaped by slavery, racism, and resistance. Organized by the concept of the ''crossroads,'' a place of ''difficulty and possibility,'' Jeffers''s essays recall a range of formative experiences, from her first encounters with Alice Walker''s writing to a searing meeting with James Baldwin.
Her disappointments with political figures, including Barack Obama and Kamala Harris, are tempered by insight into the challenges they faced; Harris, for instance, was ''expected not only to be perfect but to transcend perfection.''" - The New Yorker "I would follow Jeffers''s voice anywhere. Her wide-ranging symphony of essays on Black womanhood is a treat -- incisive, intellectual, intimate, funny, and formally inventive. I felt like I was listening to a brave yet vulnerable big sister riff blazingly on topics of history, family, politics and culture. Above all, she writes with a poet''s heart." - Emily Raboteau, author of Lessons for Survival "The poet ''shall draw us in with love and terror'' and help us see more clearly our own times. Honorée Jeffers has done exactly that with this extraordinary collection of essays and writings. Sit with this book, revel in its use of language, struggle with the ideas, acknowledge that something intimate and vulnerable is happening on the page, and witness the expansiveness of Jeffers''s imagination.
" - Eddie S. Glaude, Jr., author of We Are The Leaders We Have Been Looking For "The work of Honorée''s mother, Dr. Trellie James Jeffers, has long inspired me, guided me, made me feel things familiar, and question the familiar. Honorée''s pen is as sharp as her mother''s and just as instructive. Yet different somehow still. With a poetic voice all her own, she holds our hands and ushers us (back) to places familiar, places forgotten -- to the crossroads." - Yaba Blay, author of One Drop: Shifting the Lens on Race "Once again Jeffers reveals her genius for plumbing the depth and complexity of Black women''s lives.
With compassion, rigor, and great beauty, she unveils the tensions that circumscribe public understanding of our womanhood while challenging the larger culture and us to see ourselves in the full flowering of our gendered humanity. A personal, moving, and revelatory tour de force of understanding, care, and analysis. And like always, Honorée leaves me wanting more. Brava!" - Blair LM Kelley, Ph.D., author of Black Folk: The Roots of the Black Working Class "Jeffer''s nonfiction debut is incisive and necessary reading." - People "Equal parts memoir, history, polemic and poetry. There''s a difference between being at a crossroads--weighing an important decision at a crucial moment--and being at the crossroads: a fabled space in the Black diasporic tradition where powers can be granted, whisked away or reclaimed by the spirit world, sometimes for the price of a soul.
With her nonfiction debut, Honorée Fanonne Jeffers comfortably inhabits this mythic juncture, telling the stories of Black women in her genealogy with a literary style that joyfully resists easy categorization." - New York Times Book Review "Jeffers had a breakout hit in 2021 with her novel The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois, one of The Post''s 10 Best Books that year. Her new collection of essays is animated by the same capacious interest in the history of Black women, from colonial times and earlier up to the present day. Some of the book''s most powerful writing is about her own family." - Washington Post, "30 books to read this summer" "Jeffers made a monumental pivot to fiction with 2021''s centuries-spanning epic, The Love Songs of W.
E.B. Du Bois. Though certainly a leap, her debut novel continued what has become something of a career-long project for her, foregrounding the stories of heroic Black women. Now, Jeffers is carrying that project forward in still another mode, turning to personal and political essays to reflect on the complicated -- at times seemingly impossible -- position that Black women like her occupy in a culture determined to reduce them to virtually anything but themselves." - NPR "There is power in these writings.(Jeffers) will continue to misbehave, and we are all the better for it." - Medium "Like Jeffers''s fiction, her essays have an expansiveness.
They are not easy in terms of subject matter or prose, but much like Toni Morrison''s writing (which inspires Jeffers''s sense of rememory), they are well worth digging into. Jeffers has formed her garden, with the fertile roots laid down in her homage to Alice Walker''s In Search of Our Mother''s Gardens , and planted seeds that will inspire readers to seek out old stories with an understanding of feminism and intersectionality. These concepts are, in Jeffers''s hands, so beautifully rendered." - Library Journal "An epic collection. In one of the book''s essays, ''Toni Morrison Did That,'' Jeffers observes that the Nobel Prize-winning author ''depicted Black culture while also considering politics, while also considering United States history, while also considering White supremacy, while also considering economic class, while also considering gender, while also considering intergenerational trauma.'' We can apply this high praise to Misbehaving at the Crossroads as well. This compelling collection of archives, research, criticism and memoir demonstrates not only the power of storytelling, but also the necessity of it." - BookPage "Part personal writing, part historical examination, this is a thought-provoking work threaded through with Jeffers'' poetic style.
" - BookRiot "A poetic meditation on intersectionality. Jeffer''s ability to infuse words with emotion inspires more than a few goose bumps. one can only anticipate how the crossroads of her imagination and lived experiences will shape her next work of fiction." - Atlanta Journal-Constitution "Stunning." - People, Top 10 Books of the Year, on The Love Songs of W. E. B. Du Bois "The Love Songs of W.
E.B. Du Bois is epic in its scope. [It] traces the story of a family, the town in Georgia where they come from, and their migration outward over generations. The word epic is overused these days, but this book was meant to be an epic and it is. This is one of the most American books I have ever read. It''s a book about the United States. It''s a book about the legacy of slavery in this country.
And it''s also a book about traumas and loves that sustain over generations." - Noel King, NPR, on The Love Songs of W. E. B. Du Bois "Triumphant. Quite simply the best book that I have read in a very, very long time. An epic tale of adventure that brings to mind characters you never forget: Meg Murry in A Wrinkle in Time, Scout in To Kill a Mockingbird, Huckleberry Finn. The historical archives of Black Americans are too often filled with broad outlines of what happened.
One of the many triumphs of Love Songs is how Jeffers transforms this large history into a story that feels specific and cinematic in the telling. Just as Toni Morrison did in Beloved, Jeffers uses fiction to fill in the gaping blanks of those who have been rendered nameless and therefore storyless. A sweeping, masterly debut." - Veronica Chambers, New York Times Book Review, on The Love Songs of W. E. B. Du Bois "A feat of beauty and breadth." - Time, 100 Must-Read Books of the Year, on The Love Songs of W.
E. B. Du Bois "Whatever must be said to get you to heft this daunting debut novel by Honorée Fanonne Jeffers, I''ll say, because The Love Songs of W.E.B. Du Bois is the kind of book that comes around only once a decade. Yes, at roughly 800 pages, it is, indeed, a mountain to climb, but the journey is engrossing, and the view from the summit will transform your understanding of America. With the depth of its intelligence and the breadth of its vision, The Love Songs of W.
E.B. Du Bois is simply magnificent." - Ron Charles, Washington Post, on The Love Songs.