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Literary Fiction
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Literary Fiction
Fantasy, Sci-Fi, Speculative, Alt. History
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Biography/Memoir
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From a New Yorker staff writer and PEN Award winner, a blend of memoir, history, and reportage on one of the most complex and least understood states in America.
"In Alabama, we exist at the border of blessing and disaster…."
Alexis Okeowo grew up in Montgomery, Alabama―the former seat of the Confederacy―as the daughter of Nigerian immigrants. Here, she weaves her family's story with her state's, from Alabama's forced removal of the Creek Nation, making room for enslaved West Africans, to present-day legislative battles for "evolution disclaimers" in biology textbooks. She immerses us in a landscape today dominated not by cotton fields but by auto plants and Amazon warehouses. Defying stereotypes at every turn, Okeowo shows how people can love their home while still acknowledging its sins.
In this perspective-shifting work that is both an intimate memoir and a journalistic triumph, Okeowo investigates her life, other Alabamians' lives, and the state's lesser-known histories, to examine why Alabama has been the stage for the most extreme results of the American experiment.
"Okeowo offers a wide-ranging and nuanced account of her home state...Probing and sumptuously written, this makes for an entrancingly ground-level and empathetic view of Alabama's past and present." —Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"Okeowo delivers a portrait of a past-haunted place that is at once empathetic, sad, and troubling." —Kirkus Reviews
"A complex picture of a beautiful, colorful place stained by elements of its past, of course, but also its present...Okeowo rejects but does not ignore the stereotypes so familiar to anyone from Alabama, and Blessings and Disasters is all the richer for it...Invites the reader to stare down the barrel while appreciating the bounty of a knotty place."
—BookPage
"In this extraordinary book, Alexis Okeowo examines Alabama as only someone who grew up there could, with care, with criticism, with hope. Here, our much maligned state, the butt of the joke, the example of what not to do, looks much more like what I knew it to be growing up―complex, yes, but also, simply, just like every other state in a union that continues to grapple with its sordid past." ―Yaa Gyasi, author of Homegoing and Transcendent Kingdom
Alexis Okeowo has reported on conflict, human rights, and culture across Africa, Mexico, Europe, and the American South for the New Yorker and other publications. Okeowo is the author of A Moonless, Starless Sky: Ordinary Women and Men Fighting Extremism in Africa, which received the 2018 PEN Open Book Award. Her work has also been anthologized in The Best American Sports Writing and The Best American Travel Writing. Okeowo was named journalist of the year by the Newswomen's Club of New York in 2020 and received the Reed Environmental Writing Award in 2022.
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