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	<title type="text">Rachel Huggins | Vox</title>
	<subtitle type="text">Our world has too much noise and too little context. Vox helps you understand what matters.</subtitle>

	<updated>2019-03-06T02:20:40+00:00</updated>

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				<name>German Lopez</name>
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				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
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				<name>Jenée Desmond-Harris</name>
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				<name>Lauren Williams</name>
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			<title type="html"><![CDATA[&#8220;This was the new Jim Crow&#8221;: an oral history of the Ferguson protests]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/8/10/9123517/ferguson-protests-michael-brown-oral-history" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/8/10/9123517/ferguson-protests-michael-brown-oral-history</id>
			<updated>2018-09-14T15:58:43-04:00</updated>
			<published>2016-08-09T08:25:00-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Business &amp; Finance" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Criminal Justice" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Media" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Money" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Police Violence" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Policy" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[On August 9, 2014, two years ago, Darren Wilson, a white police officer, shot and killed Michael Brown, an unarmed 18-year-old black man, in Ferguson, Missouri. Brown&#8217;s body lay on Canfield Drive in the small St. Louis suburb for nearly five hours, as crowds grew and anger magnified. Some locals, like Ferguson City Council member [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<div class="chorus-snippet center"> <p>On August 9, 2014, two years ago, Darren Wilson, a white police officer, shot and killed <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/cards/mike-brown-protests-ferguson-missouri/mike-brown-shooting-facts-details" rel="noopener">Michael Brown</a>, an unarmed 18-year-old black man, in Ferguson, Missouri. Brown&#8217;s body lay on Canfield Drive in the small St. Louis suburb for nearly five hours, as crowds grew and anger magnified.</p> <p>Some locals, like Ferguson City Council member Mark Byrne, say that the ensuing protests &mdash; which would spark a painful and ongoing national conversation about police violence and the value of black lives in America &mdash; were unexpected in Ferguson.</p> <p>&#8220;We didn&#8217;t have the racial issues,&#8221; Byrne told Vox, &#8220;and there wasn&#8217;t racial tension.&#8221;</p> <p>Others will say that racial tension and resentment over what black residents (and, later, the <a href="http://www.vox.com/cards/mike-brown-protests-ferguson-missouri/justice-department-investigation-ferguson-police-racism" target="_blank" rel="noopener">US Department of Justice</a>) described as biased policing had long been simmering beneath the surface in the city, where the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/cards/mike-brown-protests-ferguson-missouri/protests-ferguson-mo-causes-history-facts-details" rel="noopener">population</a> was majority black and the city government and police force were majority white, and Brown&#8217;s killing simply sparked an explosion of anger that was inevitable.</p> <p>Why exactly Ferguson became the touchpoint it did can be debated, but the resonance of the response to Brown&#8217;s killing two years ago can&#8217;t. We spoke to journalists, residents, politicians, and out-of-town protesters and activists in 2015 &mdash; a year after the protests &mdash; to understand the beginnings of what would become a national movement and how a local news story became one of the most important moments of the last two years.</p> <h3>&#8220;The police shot and killed this dude&#8221;</h3> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3955898/GettyImages-459722804.0.jpg" alt="The scene of Michael Brown" data-chorus-asset-id="3955898"><p class="caption">The scene of Michael Brown&#8217;s death. (St. Louis County Prosecutor&#8217;s Office via Getty Images)</p> </div> <p><span><strong>Edward Crawford, local resident, protester</strong></span></p> <p>It was the day of my son&#8217;s birthday party. I called my little brother to ask what was the setup, since I couldn&#8217;t set up since I was at work. He told me, &#8220;Yeah, we&#8217;re setting up. But did you hear what happened?&#8221; I&#8217;m like, &#8220;No, what happened? Is it good or bad?&#8221; He was like, &#8220;It&#8217;s bad, but it doesn&#8217;t have to do with any of us.&#8221; I&#8217;m like, &#8220;Okay. What happened?&#8221; He was like, &#8220;The police shot and killed this dude.&#8221; I&#8217;m like, &#8220;Who?&#8221; Then he said, &#8220;Mike Brown.&#8221;</p> <p><span><strong>Missouri state Sen. Maria Chappelle-Nadal</strong></span></p> <p>On the day of the shooting, I started getting all of these phone calls from [St. Louis Alderman] <a href="http://www.stltoday.com/news/local/govt-and-politics/frontline-activism-boosts-antonio-french-s-profile/article_eb47c8cc-d451-50dd-9bf2-4801769c45b7.html" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Antonio French</a>. We&#8217;ve been friends all these years, but it was unlike him to call 15 times. He says, &#8220;Maria, you got to get up here.&#8221; For three days, people were just in total shock.</p> <p><span><strong>Robert Cohen, photojournalist, St. Louis Post-Dispatch</strong></span></p> <p>A shooting by a police officer gets our attention, but they&#8217;re no longer rare. It&#8217;s not one of those things that jumped out as being terribly unusual. The newsroom and the reporters got the word after one of our photographers read a tweet that was sent to him, saying that this was important and we needed to be out to cover this story.</p> <p><span><strong>Ray Downs, journalist, formerly of the Riverfront Times</strong></span></p> <p>I was actually in Memphis on vacation with my girlfriend at the time. I think we were in a motel when she pointed to the article about what&#8217;s happening in St. Louis. This was on the day it happened. I immediately thought, &#8220;I should get back to St. Louis.&#8221;</p> <p><span><strong>Princess Black, librarian and historian who traveled to Ferguson to protest</strong></span></p> <p>I was on Instagram and started to see pictures and videos about the death of Michael Brown. That was during the time when there was a lot of discussion about <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/12/4/7337157/no-indictment-eric-garner" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Eric Garner</a>, so for me it was just like, damn, I went out and had a fun night, but the reality is that I came back home and another black person was killed by the police.</p> <div class="chorus-snippet"><q aria-hidden="true" class="center">&#8220;He was like, &#8216;The police shot and killed this dude.&#8217; I&#8217;m like, &#8216;Who?&#8217; Then he said, &#8216;Mike Brown.'&#8221; </q></div> <p><span><strong>Maria Chappelle-Nadal</strong></span></p> <p>I went to see the family of Michael Brown, where he was headed before he was shot, to give my condolences to the family. We walked around. We saw rows of police officers &mdash; I would say something like 40 to 50 just on the street alone. Then, on the main road, there were probably a ton of police cars. This police officer, folks were trying to overturn his car. I remember more officers coming in. When those cops came in, that&#8217;s when people started holding their hands up and saying, <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/8/13/5998591/hands-up-dont-shoot-photos-ferguson-michael-brown" target="_blank" rel="noopener">&#8220;Hands up, don&#8217;t shoot!&#8221; </a>That&#8217;s where that came from. Everybody started thinking about the possibility of being Michael Brown.</p> <p><span><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></span></p> <p>I was out [at the scene of Brown&#8217;s death] talking to people. There were a lot of people who were angry, a lot of people crying. There were a lot of people with backpacks and books saying the revolution is starting. It was a lot of chaos.</p> <p><span><strong>Mark Byrne, Ferguson City Council member</strong></span></p> <p>I don&#8217;t think you can view it in any other way other than to say that some of the anger was justified &mdash; not necessarily against the Ferguson Police Department or Darren Wilson, but just the overall relationship between police and the African-American community. It&#8217;s almost like it boiled over at that point. I don&#8217;t know why it was that particular point, or why it was that particular incident, but certainly it had some justification.</p> <p><span><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></span></p> <p>This one guy, he told me that he was going to get a protest started. I was like, &#8220;What are you protesting?&#8221; He was like, &#8220;Man, they just shot this dude for no reason.&#8221; I was like, &#8220;Okay. What is the protest? What are you protesting? What is the message you&#8217;re trying to get across?&#8221; He was like, &#8220;Man, we need to stand up and fight.&#8221; I was like, &#8220;Stand up and fight who?&#8221; He was like, &#8220;Police. They&#8217;re the ones who did this.&#8221; So we were going back and forth, and I was sitting there telling him that it wasn&#8217;t the way to go. I thought more protests would just cause more problems, and would just agitate the police more.</p> <p><span><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></span></p> <p>The evening of August 9, there were a good number of protesters out. At the apartment complex, there were canines brought in, and certainly a lot of extra police were brought in. While it was a little surprising from my end, I still looked at this as a story that we&#8217;re going to be reporting for a week or so and be done with. But when I worked the next day, it was very obvious from the surge of protesters and outcry at the police station that this story already had resonance nationally and was not going anywhere.</p> <hr> <h3>&#8220;The sadness began to turn into anger&#8221;<span> </span> </h3> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3956058/GettyImages-453583142.0.jpg" alt="Ferguson protests" data-chorus-asset-id="3956058"><p class="caption">A demonstrator observes tear gas during the early Ferguson protests. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)</p> </div> <p><em>After Brown&#8217;s death, small, peaceful local protests quickly ballooned into large-scale demonstrations that attracted national media and often lasted until the early morning hours &mdash; and were marked by violent clashes between late-night protesters and police armed with tear gas and rubber bullets.</em></p> <p><span><strong>Ray Downs</strong></span></p> <p>I think this was around 3 or 4 pm when I got [to the protests], and people were just starting to gather. At first the protests were extremely peaceful &mdash; with visuals, signs, people quietly demonstrating, and a great sense of sadness. People were crying and hugging each other. It was really somber.</p> <p><span><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></span></p> <p>Once I saw the amount of people who were so for the protests, I felt that people had the right of a peaceful protest. It goes back to the night me and that guy were arguing. He was really on me, telling me I had to be down with this, that we could get a lot of people, and that this could change a lot of things. So I was finally like, &#8220;Okay.&#8221;</p> <p><span><strong>Ray Downs</strong></span></p> <p>I think what changed things was when more and more police came. I don&#8217;t remember at what point the police had two blocks occupied, just full of police. The police kind of boxed the protesters into these two blocks with officers and armored vehicles. As it got dark, more police showed up. Then the sadness began to turn into anger. People began yelling at police, and saying, &#8220;Hands up, don&#8217;t shoot!&#8221; At some point, the looting started. I actually wasn&#8217;t aware of what was happening at the QuikTrip. There was just so much going on.</p> <p><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --></p> <div class="chorus-snippet"><q aria-hidden="true">&#8220;It was more of a party atmosphere &mdash; not like a party as in a celebration, but more a &#8216;fuck-the-police&#8217; kind of party&#8221;</q></div> <!-- ######## END SNIPPET ######## --><p><span><strong>Maria Chappelle-Nadal</strong></span></p> <p>On Sunday night, that&#8217;s when the QuikTrip burned up. I was at the police station at the time &mdash; at a candlelight vigil there. No one wanted to do a prayer with the older ministers. There was one minister or pastor who was younger than I am, and he was the only one the folks in the crowd would allow to hold hands and pray in a circle. And I think it was because he was younger. So there was a generational gap.</p> <p><span><strong>Ray Downs</strong></span></p> <p>From my viewpoint, it was more of a party atmosphere &mdash; not like a party as in a celebration, but more a party as in a &#8220;fuck-the-police&#8221; kind of party. It was just a bunch of kids playing music in loops. It was a little funny in a way. So I moved along. I saw more and more looting. But even then &mdash; and I&#8217;m not trying to be an apologist for the looters &mdash; it didn&#8217;t seem like a crazy, hectic environment. One of the guys was in a cast; his arm was in a sling. It just didn&#8217;t seem threatening to me. Later on in the night, when things got crazier, people went to the stores and started taking stuff. The police were just standing there. And protesters asked, &#8220;You guys are the police. Are you going to just stand there and watch them do this?&#8221; The police didn&#8217;t really do anything.</p> <hr> <h3>&#8220;I really didn&#8217;t know what it was, because I had never seen tear gas&#8221;</h3> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img data-chorus-asset-id="3956084" alt="Ferguson tear gas" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3956084/GettyImages-453768716.0.jpg"><p class="caption">A protester holds up her hands as she&#8217;s engulfed by tear gas in Ferguson. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)</p> </div> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>By August 13, we had seen tear gas for two nights in a row. The protests and media were out in full force. None of us were getting a whole lot of sleep. I was working with one of my colleagues that night &mdash; it was pretty common for journalists, at least for safety&#8217;s sake, to work together while in the streets. It looked like we were actually going to finish the night peacefully. The police and the protesters normally went to head to head in the vicinity of Canfield Drive and West Florissant Avenue, which is right next to the burned QuikTrip that everyone&#8217;s heard about.</p> <p><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></p> <p>I talked to my mother, who told me to not get in trouble and be careful. We drove out there, to the protest area, which the police had blocked off. We parked the car on a church lot, because the police had all the streets blocked off. We walked to the protest area. At this time, you just see a bunch of police. You see police on every corner. There were a million of them. The police were in riot gear. They had their tactical helmets, riot shields, and batons. They were standing in a straight line, like a wall of defense. There was a guy chanting, &#8220;Go home! Return to your vehicles!&#8221; And he just kept saying that. But people weren&#8217;t listening.</p> <p>The police got so close. All of a sudden, they stopped. They were just looking at us. We were just looking at them. They were still hitting their batons to their shields. They yelled for people to get out of the street. They marched forward, and they began shooting tear gas and rubber bullets.</p> <p><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --></p> <div class="chorus-snippet"><q aria-hidden="true">&#8220;It didn&#8217;t look like tear gas. It was on the ground, it was spinning, and it was, like, the size of a soda can.&#8221;</q></div> <p>I remember there were reporters out there. Police were shooting tear gas while these people were filming. I remember people started running. It was so loud. It sounded like a cannon going off. And you just see the canisters spinning in the sky and landing not even close to us. I was like, &#8220;Okay, they&#8217;re just trying to scare us.&#8221; They shot another one, and it landed a little closer. They shot another one, and it landed in the group I was in. When I saw it, it didn&#8217;t look like tear gas. It was on the ground, it was spinning, and it was, like, the size of a soda can that you get out of a vending machine. It had fire on it. I really didn&#8217;t know what it was, because I had never seen tear gas. People were screaming. So my first initial thought was, &#8220;I just need to get this away from people,&#8221; because it was smoking and had fire on it. So I just chucked it, threw it out of the way.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>I just see this guy out of nowhere come out &mdash; I had never seen him before &mdash; and he reaches down, and he went to pick up the tear gas canister. When he reached down, sparks just kind of flew out of it. He kind of let it spin for a second. Then he came back down, grabbed it, and threw it. And I&#8217;m just trying to keep things in focus and get some pictures.</p> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img data-chorus-asset-id="3955252" alt="Edward Crawford throwing tear gas" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3955252/ed_crawford.0.jpg"><p class="caption">Edward Crawford throwing a tear gas canister in Ferguson. (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch)</p> </div> <p><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></p> <p>When I first saw the picture, my sister had sent it to my phone. I was like, &#8220;This is dope! I look pretty cool!&#8221; I called my sister. I asked if that was the picture she had seen. She was like, &#8220;Yeah, it&#8217;s everywhere. It&#8217;s all over Facebook.&#8221;</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>I didn&#8217;t have any feeling for the reach of the photograph until the next morning when I got up, got my kids to school, came back, and checked my Twitter feed just to check what was going on. It was like, &#8220;Oh my god, everyone is talking about this image.&#8221;</p> <p><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></p> <p>People were just like, &#8220;Who is this guy?&#8221; They couldn&#8217;t really see my face, because my hair was in my face. People were like, &#8220;This guy has a mask, and he&#8217;s throwing a bomb at police.&#8221; I heard &#8220;bomb,&#8221; &#8220;Molotov cocktail,&#8221; &#8220;tear gas,&#8221; a bunch of stuff. Some people said it was somebody the CIA sent out here, because [they didn&#8217;t] know anyone who had the balls to throw anything at the police.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>[The photo] was something I thought was interesting, different, something we hadn&#8217;t seen yet.</p> <p>But what I didn&#8217;t realize was the effect it had on people, and how many people saw that act of defiance as their calling. It just resonated with so many people.</p> <p><strong>Edward Crawford</strong></p> <p>They were like, &#8220;Stand up to it. You did something good. You threw the tear gas.&#8221; I&#8217;m like, &#8220;Yeah, but I didn&#8217;t throw it at the police. I was just trying to get it out of the crowd.&#8221; They were like, &#8220;Okay, whatever. You stood up.&#8221; The guy that I was arguing about the protests with earlier, he was like, &#8220;I told you that you had it in you.&#8221; I&#8217;m like, &#8220;Yeah. I really didn&#8217;t know I did.&#8221;</p> <hr> <h3>&#8220;Peace during the day and war at night&#8221;</h3> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3955884/GettyImages-453769730.0.jpg" alt="Ferguson protesters gather at Quiktrip" data-chorus-asset-id="3955884"><p class="caption">Protesters at the Ferguson QuikTrip on August 17, 2014. (Scott Olson/Getty Images).</p> </div> <p><em>As the protests continued, protesters, activists, and observers flooded the area to be a part of the growing movement. According to people who were there, some of these outsiders had better intentions than others.</em></p> <p><strong>Princess Black</strong></p> <p>Ferguson was peace during the day and war at night. Unwarranted war at night. It was almost as if a large part of the community had convened in that space and were in solidarity for Mike. It was people from all over, and we were all grieving, but we were all embracing each other, and that to me was one of the most powerful things. The QuikTrip had burned down, and they turned it into &mdash; I think it was called Liberty Park. We parked, walked two blocks up, and it was just one of the most amazing spaces. It was a situation with tragedy, a burned store, and the community took over that space. They were grilling hot dogs and hamburgers, it was all free, and it was take what you need.</p> <p><strong>Derecka Purnell, Harvard law student, formerly of the St. Louis Young Citizens Council</strong></p> <p>I remember asking people, &#8220;Hey, where do come from?&#8221; Some people came from Illinois, some people did live there. West Florissant was just always just really, really crowded. Even in the rain. The QuikTrip became a meetup spot for people who were coming from out of town. We would say, &#8220;Oh. I see you&#8217;re coming to St. Louis; there&#8217;s a group of people gathering here at pump three at this time.&#8221;</p> <p><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --></p> <div class="chorus-snippet"><q aria-hidden="true">&#8220;As soon as it became dusk, the whole vibe changed&#8221; </q></div> <p><strong>Princess Black</strong></p> <p>To see us doing for<em> </em>us<em> </em>during a vulnerable moment like that was really powerful. It was something I thought I would never see in my lifetime, and that was amazing. That was the daytime &mdash; a lot of camaraderie. No one fussing or arguing.</p> <p>And as soon as it became dusk, the whole vibe changed.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>The same people that were out carrying signs, marching up and down West Florissant Avenue, weren&#8217;t necessarily the same people that were breaking into stores, looting, and setting fires. I&#8217;m not saying that none of the protesters along the march routes participated in that, but I would see people looting stores and throwing bottles that you certainly didn&#8217;t see in the day in the march. Once I did this for a long time, a lot of the faces got to be very familiar, and I got to know some of the protesters as well. So when there were new groups that showed up out of nowhere, I would notice that, because I had been out there so much.</p> <p><strong>Derecka Purnell</strong></p> <p>I remember being in all of these group meetings sometimes, and people were saying, &#8220;There are outside agitators who are purposely coming to Ferguson because they believe that a revolution that will only happen if it&#8217;s violent.&#8221; Trying to figure out who in the crowd was potentially one of these agitators was hard.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>I never knew that you could be in the middle of a peaceful protest and have a couple people decide to throw bottles at the police. Once that kind of stuff happened, the police response was very different at that point &mdash; that&#8217;s when you had the tear gas, the rubber bullets, and all of that.</p> <hr> <h3>&#8220;This was the new Jim Crow&#8221;</h3> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3955868/GettyImages-453768612.0.jpg" alt="Police in Ferguson in a cloud of tear gas" data-chorus-asset-id="3955868"><p class="caption">Police in Ferguson on August 17, 2014, in a cloud of tear gas. (Scott Olson/Getty Images)</p> </div> <p><em>Quickly, the story out of Ferguson became as much about the <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/8/14/6003239/police-militarization-in-ferguson" target="_blank" rel="noopener">police response to the protests</a> as about the protests themselves. St. Louis County police, who were in charge of the protest response, took heavy criticism for using <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/2014/8/18/6003377/ferguson-military-gear" rel="noopener">military-grade equipment</a>, riot gear, and tear gas and rubber bullets on what observers say were largely peaceful protests (Representatives from the Ferguson and St. Louis County police departments, as well as the Missouri Highway Patrol, declined to be interviewed for this story). The events in Ferguson would inspire President Barack Obama to <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/5/21/8630795/obama-ban-military-weapons-police" target="_blank" rel="noopener">reform the programs</a> that dole out the same weapons and gear used in war to local police forces.</em></p> <p><strong>Ray Downs</strong></p> <p>For me, the story was all about police brutality. I didn&#8217;t really do much about the actual Michael Brown shooting. It became really ridiculous to me when they started using tear gas. Now they were using tear gas on people who hadn&#8217;t done anything and who were just protesting. I saw some people throw bottles and rocks. But it was a pretty lopsided response by police. Even though police in this country are so aggressive, as is documented almost daily, it was pretty incredible to see it happening in person.</p> <p><strong>Alicia Garza, co-founder, Black Lives Matter</strong></p> <p>One evening I went to one of the nightly protests, and people had basically formed a line across the street, so maybe 50 or 60 riot police, and every single night there would be a row of riot cops protecting the police station and anywhere from 80 to 150 people across the street protesting. And sometimes those two groups would come into interaction. I saw at one point, maybe about 30 or so young leaders who blocked the street formed a line in the street, and they sat down and were chanting and singing, and the police gave an order to disperse, and folks did not. Police would do this thing called a five-second rule, meaning you couldn&#8217;t stand in one place for five seconds or you&#8217;d be arrested, which was later overturned because the <a target="_blank" href="https://www.aclu.org/blog/there-no-5-second-rule-first-amendment-ferguson" rel="noopener">ACLU fought it</a>.</p> <p><strong>Maria Chappelle-Nadal</strong></p> <p>It was oppressive treatment. When I look at what happened in <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/cards/freddie-gray-baltimore-riots-police-violence" rel="noopener">Baltimore</a> and protests in other states, they all did a better job than what Ferguson and St. Louis County did. This was the new Jim Crow.</p> <p><strong>Princess Black</strong></p> <p><a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/8/18/6030413/tear-gas-treatment-pain-symptoms" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Tear gas</a> is very overwhelming. You can try to cover your mouth and face, but it still penetrates. It&#8217;s like you can&#8217;t breathe, and it burns. One night we were in the car for safety, and we were trying to get out, and they were doing tear gas on a residential street, and the tear gas comes through the vents and the windows and then you&#8217;re not safe in your car.</p> <p><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --></p> <div class="chorus-snippet"><q aria-hidden="true">&#8220;I think it&#8217;s the most violent thing I&#8217;ve ever seen&#8221;</q></div> <!-- ######## END SNIPPET ######## --><p><strong>Chauniqua Young, New York City&ndash;based attorney</strong></p> <p>I was tear-gassed along with my colleagues [from the Center for Constitutional Rights]. After it happened, I had trouble sleeping. I felt shaky. I know this happened to the people who went before me who were part of the civil rights movement. It happens all the time, it happens all over the world, but I didn&#8217;t expect that it would happen to me as part of participating in a protest in the United States.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>I&#8217;ve traveled internationally for work, and I&#8217;ve been in war-zone-type areas. But most of the time when I&#8217;ve been in these areas, there&#8217;s been ceasefires or relative peace. So, really, the most violent encounters I&#8217;ve had between law enforcement and people were in Ferguson. I think it&#8217;s the most violent thing I&#8217;ve ever seen.</p> <p><strong>Alicia Garza</strong></p> <p>It was pretty surreal. Most of the images we were seeing &mdash; it&#8217;s hard to describe. When you turn on the television and you see a place that few people besides those who live there knew existed, and you see people running from tanks, tear gas, and rubber bullets, in some ways for me it was like, <em>Wait is this happening in the US or somewhere overseas?</em>, given that juxtaposition of the imagery. But what I remember feeling was that our people aren&#8217;t safe.</p> <p><strong>Mark Byrne</strong></p> <p>When it comes to dispersing the crowd, if law enforcement had a better relationship with the people who were protesting, my hope is they would have been able to get them to go home earlier, so there wouldn&#8217;t have been those standoffs. But would that have been wishful thinking? I don&#8217;t know.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>The police walk a fine line. They&#8217;re trying to keep the peace. I think they learned over the weeks that taking a very aggressive stance from their end was not helping the situation. I think there were some leadership within the ranks that took a different approach and made better inroads with some of the protest leadership.</p> <p><strong>Derecka Purnell</strong></p> <p>The day after <a target="_blank" href="http://www.csmonitor.com/USA/2014/0816/How-Capt.-Ron-Johnson-changed-police-tactics-in-wake-of-Michael-Brown-shooting-video" rel="noopener">Captain Ron Johnson</a> said, &#8220;We&#8217;re not going to have the National Guardsmen on Florissant, on West Florissant. It&#8217;s going to be peaceful. I want to walk with the people,&#8221; and all of this stuff &#8230; I remember the day after that announcement came, West Florissant almost become festive. There was music, people would just drive their cars and sing and chant together.</p> <hr> <h3>&#8220;<span>There were just so many journalists&#8221;</span> </h3> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img data-chorus-asset-id="3956106" alt="Ferguson journalist" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3956106/GettyImages-453861894.0.jpg"><p class="caption">A photojournalist in the Ferguson protests. (Anadolu Agency via Getty Images)</p> </div> <p><em>The national media swarmed on Ferguson, and soon it was said that journalists became part of the story, as many were hit with tear gas and rubber bullets and were even <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/2014/8/13/6000785/wesley-lowrey-and-ryan-reilly-arrested" rel="noopener">arrested</a> as they tried to cover the protests. Some of the people on the ground objected to what they felt was unfair coverage &mdash; violent late-night clashes got much more play in the news than peaceful demonstrations.</em></p> <p><strong>Chauniqua Young</strong></p> <p>I&#8217;ve never had the situation where I was part of something and the reporting on it was completely opposite of what was actually happening.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>We got a lot of criticism at our newspaper for some of the images that we presented. A lot of the times if you had an entire day of peaceful marches end with one violent confrontation in the evening, certainly some people can say that we didn&#8217;t accurately represent the day because the day was mostly about peace and not about violence. So how could we put that picture on the front page? But from our end, it was about reporting the confrontations that are going on.</p> <p><strong>Princess Black</strong></p> <p>Even after the attacks every night with tear gas and rubber bullets, people were still talking about looting as if that was something that went on forever. Looting went on for maybe a night or two. By the time we got there that following week, it was nothing like that. But that was the narrative that the media kept drumming up and talking about. No one wants to hear that the black community came, passing out ponchos and water and giving free food to all the people standing in solidarity in the QuikTrip parking lot that was burned down.</p> <p>I didn&#8217;t see any media when we were out in the day, but as soon as the sun started to set, that&#8217;s when the media was set up.</p> <p><strong>Ray Downs</strong></p> <p>When you had so much media there, the media also became part of the story. There were just so many journalists there.</p> <p><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --></p> <div class="chorus-snippet"><q aria-hidden="true">&#8220;No one wants to hear that the black community came, passing out ponchos and giving free food to all the people standing in solidarity&#8221; </q></div> <p><strong>Maria Chappelle-Nadal</strong></p> <p>I&#8217;m so grateful to the media, because it finally gave us a voice. What I was enduring and what everyone else was enduring; we thought it was normal to be turned out at every single turn. You know? This shit wasn&#8217;t normal. It was not normal. So I&#8217;m grateful to the media for coming to Missouri.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>One of my favorite images is the one that didn&#8217;t get a lot of attention. One evening at the Mike Brown memorial, at the apartment complex, there may have been one or two media people at the time, but overall it was very quiet. It was just a small gathering of college fraternity members. It was kind of dusk, getting into the evening. They were just gathering around, trying to do a prayer. It was very quiet, very peaceful. And I was glad to be able to share that image to counteract some of the more violent photos we showed later in the evening or the evening before.</p> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3955852/140819_RC_FERGUSON_004.0.jpg" alt="Mourners at the Michael Brown memorial" data-chorus-asset-id="3955852"><p class="caption">College students pray at Michael Brown&#8217;s memorial. (Robert Cohen/St. Louis Post-Dispatch)</p> </div> <hr> <h3>&#8220;Those kids in Ferguson did that&#8221;</h3> <img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/3956112/GettyImages-459416786.0.jpg" alt="Michael Brown Sr." data-chorus-asset-id="3956112"><p class="caption">Michael Brown&#8217;s father talks to reporters. (Jewel Samad/AFP via Getty Images)</p> <p><em>A year after Michael Brown&#8217;s death, the impact of the Ferguson protests was still rippling through the country and <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/2015/8/7/9113935/ferguson-black-lives-matter-winning" rel="noopener">affecting how the nation sees police-citizen relations</a> &mdash; specifically within black communities &mdash; across the country. Locally, the St. Louis area was taking stock of how to fix policing and courts systems that a Department of Justice report described as incredibly flawed. And fed-up Ferguson residents started it all. Here&#8217;s what some of the people involved told us in 2015, on the eve of the first anniversary.</em></p> <p><strong>Maria Chappelle-Nadal</strong></p> <p>It still hasn&#8217;t changed [in Missouri]. Ferguson has had more impact on states around the country than Missouri itself.</p> <p><strong>Mark Byrne</strong></p> <p>Were there any lessons to be learned? Yeah. The lesson to be learned is that anywhere in America today, whether it&#8217;s a majority-minority community or however it ends up being, we need to have a law enforcement that looks at the diversity of the citizens who they protect, gets to know those citizens, and gets involved in the community.</p> <p>I don&#8217;t think you can do a very good job to serve and protect if you don&#8217;t know the individuals you&#8217;re serving and protecting on a daily basis. And if our officers can take the lead on learning that very important lesson, I think that&#8217;s a very big deal.</p> <p><strong>Robert Cohen</strong></p> <p>It&#8217;s still a daily story for us. Many days it&#8217;s a page-one story for us. We&#8217;ve been hitting the further-reaching effects of the protests themselves. A lot of them have manifested in the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/2015/3/3/8143859/ferguson-police-racism-justice-department" rel="noopener">municipal court system</a>. So we&#8217;ve been reporting a lot about how the municipal court system works and how they don&#8217;t work. We&#8217;re seeing a lot of changes there being made right now.</p> <p><strong>Mark Byrne</strong></p> <p>The court reform in St. Louis County probably would have never happened but for this event. As an attorney, I know it needed to happen. There&#8217;s no question it needed to happen. There&#8217;s still courts out there that are not following the recommendations that have been made, and they need to. But there&#8217;s still some issues that need to be fixed. The hope is that everybody starts to take the position that we&#8217;re in this together, and it&#8217;s a partnership.</p> <p><strong>Celeste Faison, black organizing coordinator at National Domestic Workers Alliance and co-founder of Blackout Collective</strong></p> <p>One of the biggest lessons that I&#8217;ve learned from Ferguson is that the actions that happened in Ferguson really changed the way that direct action happens within a movement. I don&#8217;t know if Ferguson is properly credited for that. Those kids in Ferguson did that.</p> <p><strong>Derecka Purnell</strong></p> <p>I remember asking a reporter, &#8220;What&#8217;s different about Ferguson compared to what you&#8217;ve seen in other places?&#8221; He said, &#8220;In Ferguson you have everyday people who have this civil rights moment sort of being forced upon them, and they&#8217;re stepping up the best way that they know how.&#8221;</p> <p>I feel like that&#8217;s what it captured: how there are a lot of young, 15- to 30-year-olds who probably aren&#8217;t quoting James Baldwin, but are out here now working as a part of this fight.</p> <div class="chorus-snippet fullbleed"> <div class="vox-cardstack"><a href="http://www.vox.com/cards/mike-brown-protests-ferguson-missouri">The 2014 Ferguson protests over the Michael Brown shooting, explained</a></div>  </div> <div class="chorus-snippet credits"> <hr> <div class="credits-content"> <div>Writers: <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/authors/german-lopez" rel="noopener">German Lopez</a>, <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/authors/jenee-desmond-harris" rel="noopener">Jen&eacute;e Desmond-Harris</a>, and <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/authors/rachel-huggins" rel="noopener">Rachel Huggins</a> </div> <div>Editors: <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/authors/lauren-williams" rel="noopener">Lauren Williams</a> and <a href="http://www.vox.com/authors/tanya-pai" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Tanya Pai</a> </div> <!-- ##### REPLACE TITLE LINK AND NAME ##### --> </div> </div> <!-- ######## END SNIPPET ######## --> </div>
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			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Watch the game-winning shot that will live on in March Madness memories for decades]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/latest-news/2016/4/5/11368372/buzzer-beater-ncaa-championship" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/latest-news/2016/4/5/11368372/buzzer-beater-ncaa-championship</id>
			<updated>2016-04-05T08:45:10-04:00</updated>
			<published>2016-04-05T10:30:02-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Culture" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Sports" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[In one of the craziest finishes in college basketball history, Kris Jenkins&#8217;s incredible buzzer-beating 3-pointer won the NCAA men&#8217;s basketball national championship, clinching a 77-74 win for Villanova over the North Carolina Tar Heels. Monday night&#8217;s championship game ended with a historic moment: the first buzzer beater in college basketball championship game history in more [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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						<p>In one of the craziest finishes in college basketball history, Kris Jenkins&rsquo;s incredible buzzer-beating 3-pointer won the NCAA men&#8217;s basketball national championship, clinching a 77-74 win for Villanova over the North Carolina Tar Heels.</p>

<p>Monday night&rsquo;s championship game ended with a historic moment: the first buzzer beater in college basketball championship game history in more than 30 years.</p>

<p>With the clock running out, Jenkins took hold of the ball in thrilling fashion.</p>

<p>&#8220;We&rsquo;re just trying to be legendary,&#8221; Jenkins yelled after his game-winning shot during the NCAA Championship game. &#8220;Nobody believed in us but us. I think every shot is going in, and that was no different.&#8221;</p>
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					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Bernie’s got game, in one amazing GIF]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2016/2/10/10959124/bernie-sanders-new-hampshire-basketball" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2016/2/10/10959124/bernie-sanders-new-hampshire-basketball</id>
			<updated>2019-03-05T21:20:40-05:00</updated>
			<published>2016-02-10T11:45:03-05:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="2016 Presidential Election" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Bernie Sanders" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Politics" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[Bernie&#8217;s got game. After defeating his rival Hillary Clinton in New Hampshire&#8217;s Democratic primary on Tuesday night, Sanders celebrated in an unexpected way: by shooting hoops. The 74-year-old Vermont senator effortlessly hit jump shots with his sons and grandkids in a basement gym before giving his big victory speech. And he wasn&#8217;t half bad. Fox&#8217;s [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<figure>

<img alt="" data-caption="Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT) speaks onstage after declaring victory over Hillary Clinton in the New Hampshire on February 9. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images" data-portal-copyright="Spencer Platt/Getty Images" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/15688292/GettyImages-509278292.0.1511364267.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
	<figcaption>
	Sen. Bernie Sanders (D-VT) speaks onstage after declaring victory over Hillary Clinton in the New Hampshire on February 9. | Spencer Platt/Getty Images	</figcaption>
</figure>
<img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/6026941/Bernie_loop__1_.0.gif?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" alt="" title="" data-has-syndication-rights="1" data-caption="" data-portal-copyright="" />
<p>Bernie&rsquo;s got game.</p>

<p>After defeating his rival Hillary Clinton in <a href="http://www.vox.com/2016/2/9/10950664/new-hampshire-primary-2016-results-polls-democratic-republican">New Hampshire&rsquo;s Democratic primary</a> on Tuesday night, Sanders celebrated in an unexpected way: by shooting hoops.</p>

<p>The 74-year-old Vermont senator effortlessly hit jump shots with his sons and grandkids in a basement gym before giving his big victory speech.</p>

<p>And he wasn&#8217;t half bad. Fox&#8217;s Megyn Kelly was <a href="http://www.vox.com/2016/2/9/10956340/fox-news-bernie-sanders">shocked</a> by Sanders&rsquo;s skills on the court and his ability to make shot after shot. &#8220;Is this some kind of a joke? How is he making every single one?&#8221; she asked.</p>
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									</content>
			
					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[You&#8217;ve heard of Misty Copeland. Now meet the other ballerina who made history this year.]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/12/24/10653956/stella-abrera-ballet" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/12/24/10653956/stella-abrera-ballet</id>
			<updated>2019-03-05T16:58:05-05:00</updated>
			<published>2015-12-24T09:00:02-05:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="archives" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[2015 was a groundbreaking year in ballet. On June 30, the American Ballet Theatre made an announcement that would forever change the world of dance: Misty Copeland, one of the most famous ballerinas and biggest champions of diversity in the industry, would be promoted to the highest rank within the prestigious dance company, nearly a [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<figure>

<img alt="" data-caption="Stella Abrera and Sascha Radetsky of American Ballet Theatre." data-portal-copyright="" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/15634463/yagp.0.0.1538793929.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
	<figcaption>
	Stella Abrera and Sascha Radetsky of American Ballet Theatre.	</figcaption>
</figure>
<p>2015 was a groundbreaking year in ballet.</p>

<p>On June 30, the American Ballet Theatre made an announcement that would forever change the world of dance: Misty Copeland, one of the most famous ballerinas and biggest champions of diversity in the industry, would be promoted to the highest rank within the prestigious dance company, nearly a week after making a <a href="http://www.elle.com/culture/art-design/news/a29057/misty-copeland-swan-lake-performance/">stellar debut</a> as lead in ballet classic <em>Swan Lake.</em></p>

<p>&#8220;I had moments of doubting myself, and wanting to quit, because I didn&rsquo;t know that there would be a future for an African-American woman to make it to this level,&#8221; Copeland said in an emotional <a href="http://www.playbill.com/news/article/history-making-ballet-star-misty-copeland-makes-triumphant-broadway-debut-see-the-jubilant-shots-of-her-first-curtain-call-359516/print">press conference</a> the day of her promotion.</p>

<p>Copeland is the first black principal dancer, a highly coveted position, in the company&#8217;s 75-year history. It&#8217;s a major feat in an industry that has terribly underrepresented minority women for decades. &#8220;Even with my peers, people don&rsquo;t want to talk about the statistics in their companies and in their schools because they&rsquo;re afraid people are going to come down on them and they don&rsquo;t want to be called racist,&#8221; Rachel Moore, ABT&#8217;s former executive director, said of ballet&#8217;s longstanding <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/11/01/arts/dance/push-for-diversity-in-ballet-turns-to-training-the-next-generation.html">diversity</a> problem.</p>

<p>But Copeland wasn&rsquo;t the only ballerina of color to make history that day.</p>

<p>Stella Abrera, a dynamic dancer who established a solid career as a veteran soloist with ABT for 14 years, also nabbed the role of principal dancer, becoming the first appointed Filipina-American woman.</p>

<p>Her unexpected rise was <a href="http://www.asamnews.com/2015/10/26/buzzfeed-stella-abrera-opens-up-about-her-rise-to-principle-dancer-of-american-ballet-theater/">praised</a> by Asian-American and Filipino publications around the world and sparked an outpouring of support from Filipina dancers on social media who used the hashtag #PinayPower to show their pride. Abrera&rsquo;s success was a powerful reminder that in a field that has little racial or ethnic diversity, they too could ascend to the highest ranks one day.</p>

<p>However, being among the &#8220;first&#8221; to break a racial barrier in ballet, a world dominated by young, privileged white women, wasn&#8217;t anything that Abrera ever gave much thought to, especially growing up in a diverse community in Pasadena, California.</p>

<p>In a December 11 <a href="http://www.scpr.org/programs/take-two/2015/12/11/45555/stella-abrera-came-back-from-a-devastating-injury/">interview</a> with Southern California Public Radio, Abrera revealed something unique as a woman of color in the ballet world: She never felt isolated because of her race:</p>
<blockquote class="wp-block-quote has-text-align-none is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>Ever since my promotion I&rsquo;ve been asked if it&rsquo;s affected my career, and to be honest, in the 20 years that I&rsquo;ve been a professional dancer at American Ballet Theatre, it&rsquo;s never been an issue for me. It&rsquo;s not positive, it&rsquo;s not negative, it&rsquo;s been irrelevant. I&rsquo;ve had the luxury of fully focusing on the work. &hellip; So that&rsquo;s why at first I found it a little disconcerting that my ethnicity was being brought up, but now I&rsquo;m seeing a lot on my social media &mdash; I&rsquo;m noticing that a lot of young dancers who are Filipino American, they show support for me and I find that very heartwarming.</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Abrera may not have felt that her skin color was a barrier in ballet, but she faced other hardships on her tumultuous journey to the top.</p>

<p>After becoming principal dancer at 37 &mdash; way past the prime age of a typical ballerina &mdash; and surviving a devastating injury that nearly prevented her from walking several years ago, Abrera has said she is grateful to dance at all.</p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">The unexpected turn downhill: a rising ballerina’s worst nightmare</h2>
<p>In a candid and touching interview with <a href="http://www.buzzfeed.com/mattortile/stella-abrera-shes-just-getting-started#.qaB4wM41KR">BuzzFeed</a> in October, Abrera recounted the frustrating day in 2008 when she feared her career, which was taking off like a rocket, could suddenly come to a screeching halt:</p>
<blockquote class="wp-block-quote has-text-align-none is-layout-flow wp-block-quote-is-layout-flow">
<p>&#8220;It started after a very tough rehearsal,&#8221; says Stella. &#8220;I noticed my calf was aching, and I said, whatever, just push through it.&#8221; However, she began to lose strength in her muscles and she grew weaker. &#8220;It eventually got so bad, the ache, that my leg just was not functioning properly.&#8221;Despite seeing several doctors and physical therapists, a proper diagnosis eluded Stella for nine months. &#8220;No MRI could tell me anything,&#8221; she says. &#8220;No nerve connection tests, no ultrasound, nothing. All the doctors were shrugging their shoulders like, &lsquo;Sorry, this is a mystery.&rsquo;&#8221;</p>
</blockquote>
<p>Abrera eventually discovered the unrelenting pain was the result of a back injury and sciatic nerve damage, causing severe pain and numbness in the back of her leg. The condition was likely caused by long, grueling hours of rehearsal and performances she endured from dancing professionally since she was 17 years old.</p>

<p>In the blink of an eye, she went from a rising star to suddenly sidelined at the peak of her career, a roller coaster that caused her to hit rock bottom, both emotionally and physically. For months she couldn&#8217;t walk without being in constant pain &mdash; much less dance &mdash; as her calf continued to lose strength.</p>

<p>In a leap of faith, at the recommendation of a doctor, Abrera began taking cortisone injections to help alleviate the pain in her back and spine, and the slow, tedious 18-month road to recovery began.</p>

<p>But the hardest part was regaining confidence that she could reach her peak again after such a major setback. In an industry where women have <a href="https://diabloballet.wordpress.com/2013/06/26/retiring-in-your-30s-now-what/">short-lived careers</a> and typically retire in their 30s, relearning basic dance steps at age 29 felt like climbing <a href="http://www.nbcnews.com/news/asian-america/stella-abrera-battles-back-pain-ballets-ultra-elite-n403736">Mount Everest</a>. &#8220;At my lowest point, the grannies on the street with their walkers were faster than me,&#8221; Abrera <a href="http://www.buzzfeed.com/mattortile/stella-abrera-shes-just-getting-started#.wyqzOYzkAQ">recalled.</a></p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Rising from rock bottom to the top of ballet</h2>
<p>Fueled by a deep inner strength to press forward in the midst of a tumultuous storm, Abrera kicked into overdrive. She was determined to dance again in any capacity and never focused on what she&#8217;d do career-wise if she couldn&#8217;t fulfill her lifelong passion.</p>

<p>Over time, each baby step made helped her feel a little more empowered. On good days she muddled through rehab in aches and pain yet found the strength to endure. On exceptional days she pushed herself to exercise, and eventually rehabilitated her legs to the point needed to dance at her previous level, a level in which she once amassed thousands of calf raises over the years.</p>

<p>When she finally clawed her way back to the stage in 2009, she emerged as a stronger, more skillful dancer driven by a new mindset:</p>

<p>&#8220;Instead of dancing to fulfill my girlhood dream of being a principal, I focused simply on becoming the best dancer and artist I could possibly be,&#8221; she said in an August interview with the online dance magazine <a href="http://www.danceinforma.com/2015/08/07/stella-abrera-promoted-to-abt-principal/">Dance Informa</a>. &#8220;I didn&rsquo;t even consider promotion. Dancing, at any rank, is an incredible gift. I vowed to never forget that.&#8221;</p>

<p>Immersing herself in dance like she never left, Abrera bounced back better than ever, breathing new life into each performance by changing everything from her technique to how she viewed each performance.</p>

<p>She moved with ethereal grace in the title role of <em>Giselle</em> in the <a href="http://lifestyle.inquirer.net/199010/stella-abrera-is-abts-first-filipino-american-principal-dancer">Philippines</a>&#8216; 2014 staging of the ballet classic and was <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/06/01/arts/dance/review-the-sleeping-beauty-reawakened-by-american-ballet-theater.html?_r=1">lauded</a> for the complexities of her dance solo and radiant presence as the Lilac Fairy in ABT&rsquo;s production of <em>Sleeping Beauty</em> this year.</p>

<p>Her most triumphant moment came in May, when after years of dancing in the background and never getting the opportunity to lead a performance at New York&rsquo;s Metropolitan Opera House, she rose to the challenge of filling in for principal dancer Polina Semionova in ABT&#8217;s long-anticipated debut of <em>Giselle</em>.</p>

<p>Abrera&#8217;s spectacular performance, which caught the attention of ABT directors and helped her land the principal dancer position a month later, earned the praise typically reserved for the most esteemed ballerinas.</p>

<p>&#8220;Some of her dancing was luminous, and all of it was stylish and heartfelt; but above all in Act II, where the dead Giselle dances to save her living lover, Albrecht, from death, she made it clear that dance was a spiritual act,&#8221; the New York Times <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/05/25/arts/dance/review-american-ballet-theaters-giselle-bounds-as-past-giselles-watch.html">raved</a> in a review. &#8220;Her steps were filled with yearning for him and devotion to dance itself.&#8221;</p>

<p>Through a long, turbulent journey to the very top ranks of ballet, one filled with a nearly career-ending injury, a string of relapses, and times of harrowing emotional distress, no other theme echoes louder in Abrera&rsquo;s life than her uncanny perseverance and resilience in pursuit of her dreams.</p>

<p>&#8220;All the things that have happened pointed to me not being chosen [as a principal dancer],&#8221; Abrera told NBC News. &#8220;And if that happened, no one would have batted an eye. I wouldn&#8217;t have. It&#8217;s crazy at 37, this doesn&#8217;t happen in our world. Thank God, it did. It&#8217;s a wonderful thing.&#8221;</p>
						]]>
									</content>
			
					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Susannah Locke</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Emily St. James</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Libby Nelson</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>David Roberts</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Brad Plumer</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Dara Lind</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Caroline Framke</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Melissa Bell</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Emmett Rensin</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<author>
				<name>Andrew Prokop</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[We read all 20 National Book Award nominees for 2015. Here&#8217;s what we thought.]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/11/18/9753832/national-book-award-2015-nominee-reviews" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/11/18/9753832/national-book-award-2015-nominee-reviews</id>
			<updated>2017-12-14T11:41:08-05:00</updated>
			<published>2015-11-19T09:26:00-05:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Books" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Criminal Justice" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Culture" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Policy" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Reviews" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[Each year, just 20 American books are selected as National Book Award nominees &#8212; five in fiction, five in nonfiction, five in poetry, and five in young adult literature. Few people are likely to read all 20, so just like last year, we&#8217;ve decided to help you out by taking on that task, in case [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<div class="chorus-snippet center"> <p>Each year, just 20 American books are selected as National Book Award nominees &mdash; five in fiction, five in nonfiction, five in poetry, and five in young adult literature. Few people are likely to read all 20, so <a target="_blank" href="http://www.vox.com/2014/11/19/7246149/national-book-award-nominee-reviews" rel="noopener">just like last year</a>, we&#8217;ve decided to help you out by taking on that task, in case you&#8217;re looking for some recommendations. For more on each title, visit the <a target="_blank" href="http://www.nationalbook.org/" rel="noopener">National Book Awards&#8217; website</a>. The winners were announced at a ceremony on Wednesday, November 18.</p> <p>Our thoughts on all 20 nominees are below.</p> <hr> <h3>Fiction</h3> </div><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div id="1447833545_763" class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image "> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447833545_763">&#59401;</a> <a class="js-button-social facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" data-analytics-social="facebook">&#59394;</a> <a class="js-button-social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" data-analytics-social="twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title">WINNER: <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Fortune-Smiles-Stories-Adam-Johnson-ebook/dp/B00RKO6N14/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832063&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=fortune+smiles+adam+johnson">Fortune Smiles: Stories</a></em> by Adam Johnson</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img data-chorus-asset-id="4276433" alt="fortunesmiles.0.jpg" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276433/fortunesmiles.0.jpg"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Fortune smiles very little in <em>Fortune Smiles</em>, Adam Johnson&#8217;s new collection of short stories. The author&#8217;s previous book, the Pulitzer Prize&ndash;winning epic <em>The Orphan Master&#8217;s Son</em>, was certainly shot through with darkness, but there were episodes of adventure, a sense of high stakes, and, if not a <em>happy</em> ending, at least a hopeful one.</p> <p>The characters in <em>Fortune Smiles</em> are offered no such consolation. Their struggles are mundane, their options hemmed in by their pasts &mdash; and as for endings, there are none. Instead, each of these six stories acts like a zoom camera, diving in to examine a small slice of a life tossed about by fate and then, just as quickly, cutting away.</p> <p>But what slices! The word is overused in the literary world, but Johnson is truly fearless; he reminds you that fiction, not just the worlds it creates but the high-wire act of writing itself, can be as thrilling to witness as any special effects spectacle.</p> <p>Johnson&#8217;s daring manifests in two ways. First, his stories do not follow the arc we crave: beginning, struggle, resolution. Instead they dwell in the space between stories, with characters who are stuck, or at least spent, waiting for another life to begin. Often a story ends just as something shakes loose, just as a choice is made. We&#8217;re left haunted and wondering.</p> <p>Second, Johnson uses his unparalleled gift &mdash; creating characters who are instantly alive and indelibly specific, with just a few deft strokes &mdash; to transport the reader to places as unsettling as they are unfamiliar. One story is told from the perspective of a pedophile, another a retired Stasi prison warden. As I read them I felt <em>nervous</em>; Johnson made me know and understand these people, and I felt implicated in what might come next.</p> <p>There are bad choices, moral failings, and doomed attempts at redemption, but underneath is a persistent yearning for connection that pins our gaze. These are feats of empathy, without a hint of clich&eacute; or a character you&#8217;ve ever met before. I can&#8217;t recall a book in years that did so much to rekindle my love of fiction itself.</p> <p>&mdash; David Roberts</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Random House</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div id="1447833420_6" class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image "> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447833420_6">&#59401;</a> <a class="js-button-social facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" data-analytics-social="facebook">&#59394;</a> <a class="js-button-social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" data-analytics-social="twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Fates-Furies-Novel-Lauren-Groff-ebook/dp/B00SI0B5VW/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832036&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=fates+and+furies">Fates and Furies</a></em> by Lauren Groff</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img data-chorus-asset-id="4276445" alt="fatesandfuries.0.jpg" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276445/fatesandfuries.0.jpg"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>It&#8217;s a familiar story: Two extraordinary people meet, fall in love, and become something bigger than themselves. Lotto and Mathilde (names so charming they&#8217;re almost annoying) hail from vastly different backgrounds but find a home in each other, for better and for worse. We monitor their hopes and dreams over the course of their lives as they&#8217;re interrupted by obstacles that crop up in the form of practical realities, and observe all the aches, pains, joy, sex, and love in between.</p> <p>But Groff&#8217;s storytelling is only familiar insomuch as it has a way of reaching into your chest and holding on with a silent, firm grip. We live in the same world as Lotto and Mathilde, but the author&#8217;s prose so keenly notes every detail that their reality feels sharper, somehow more realized. Groff, whose quietly gut-wrenching short stories frequently appear in the New Yorker and the Atlantic, has more room to expand in the titanic <em>Fates and Furies</em>, but her choices are no less specific and bruising.</p> <p>First, she sets to work making you fall in love with Lotto, just like everyone in the book. He is one of the more ostensibly clich&eacute;d characters &mdash; the charismatic yet insecure artist &mdash; but his enthusiasm is so genuine that you can&#8217;t help but understand why every person he meets ends up rooting for him. We trace his childhood in Florida, moneyed and careless. We follow him to Vassar, where he throws himself into the waiting scrum of fumbling sex, and then meets Mathilde. We bear witness to their lives together, Lotto doggedly pursuing his passions as his stalwart wife stands by his side.</p> <p>And then the perspective shifts.</p> <p>Tilting vantage points crop up throughout the novel. Some slide in unannounced &mdash; friends at a party, musing on Lotto and Mathilde&#8217;s charmed story. When Mathilde&#8217;s side begins in earnest, though, it&#8217;s a shock to the system. At that point, we&#8217;ve been in Lotto&#8217;s exuberant and volatile head for so long that Mathilde&#8217;s even-keeled rancor, simmering and patient, is a jarring counterpoint.</p> <p>Again, though, Groff takes what could be typical and transforms it into a stunning, wrenching treatise on love, work, grief, and resentment. These subjects come up time and time again in art, but <em>Fate and Furies</em> is a gorgeous reminder that knowing the story isn&#8217;t the same as feeling &mdash; really <em>feeling &mdash; </em>the roiling emotions that drive it.</p> <p>&mdash; Caroline Framke</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Riverhead Books</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div id="1447833705_747" class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image "> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447833705_747">&#59401;</a> <a class="js-button-social facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" data-analytics-social="facebook">&#59394;</a> <a class="js-button-social twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" data-analytics-social="twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Little-Life-Novel-Hanya-Yanagihara-ebook/dp/B00N6PCZO0/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832130&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=a+little+life">A Little Life</a></em> by Hanya Yanagihara</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4277407/alittlelifebig.0.jpg" alt="alittlelifebig.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4277407"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p><em>A Little Life</em>&#8216;s reputation precedes it. It&#8217;s 2015&#8217;s Big Book, the literary novel that somehow crossed over to become an unlikely bestseller. It&#8217;s also known for being capital-D Difficult, for being the sort of challenging read that many will have to set aside. Its depictions of brutality, sexual abuse, and self-harm are so intense as to have garnered &#8220;recommendations&#8221; that include <a target="new" href="http://www.vox.com/2015/10/14/9519855/a-little-life" rel="noopener">never wanting to read the book again</a> and having <a target="new" href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/news/act-four/wp/2015/07/13/this-is-one-of-the-best-books-of-2015-im-not-sure-you-should-read-it/" rel="noopener">no desire to recommend it</a> to anyone else.</p> <p>Yet one should not approach <em>A Little Life</em> with trepidation. All of the above is true; the plot contains some of the worst things humans can do to one another, and it does not flinch. And at 720 pages, it could take weeks to finish.</p> <p>But Hanya Yanagihara&#8217;s greatest skill stems from how well she structures her story, which starts as one thing (a novel about young men attempting to conquer the city) and ends as something altogether different, wounded and bloody but ultimately tender and loving.</p> <p>The author expertly alternates between moments of deep cruelty and moments of almost unbelievable kindness; at all times, she keeps one eye on the ways that humans can be good to each other and, just as easily, terrible to each other. <em>A Little Life</em>&#8216;s title refers to how insignificant any one life can feel in the face of the sweep of history (though Yanagihara does her very best to keep the novel from feeling rooted in a particular time period), and yet how tiny moments of crystalline goodness can make that life feel larger than the vast sweep of time and space.</p> <p>In the four friends at the center of the story, but especially in the perfectly sketched portrait of Jude St. Francis, whose dark past and haunted present drive so much of the novel, Yanagihara finds a way to talk about friendship, horror, and, finally, somehow, a grace that exists even in anyone&#8217;s darkest moments.</p> <p>&mdash; Todd VanDerWerff</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Doubleday</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447833921_744"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447833921_744">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Refund-Stories-Karen-E-Bender-ebook/dp/B00PSSF7U2/ref=sr_1_2?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832179&amp;sr=1-2&amp;keywords=refund+karen+bender">Refund</a></em> by Karen E. Bender</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276423/refund.0.jpg" alt="refund.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276423"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>I grew up in the southern California where many of <em>Refund&rsquo;s </em>stories take place, the one between 9/11 and the crash. The distinction between city and suburbs had largely dissolved. SUVs and reality television troubled us. Children were born to and raised by parents older but less confident than their own, possessed by the growing, uncertain notion that somehow, and sometime soon, the bottom would fall out.</p> <p>What characterized that time was mitigation, the in-between where the possibility that our lifestyles could not go on forever gained urgent purchase in our imaginations before that lifestyle&rsquo;s successor spilled wholly into view. It was still possible to get by, even if getting by &mdash; for another day, or week, or year &mdash; became the consuming preoccupation of middle-class life, not so much destroying grander ambitions as putting them off again.</p> <p><em>Refund</em> is assembled from stories published over the course of nearly 20 years, but it&#8217;s extraordinarily consistent. Karen E. Bender is preoccupied with money, of course, but she is preoccupied with sickness and family and cats, too. Thirteen variations on a small set of themes give Bender opportunity to contradict herself, to complicate matters and avoid the didactic or obvious. Money, for example, does not merely corrupt: It dictates hope and worry, right now and tomorrow. It affords possibilities sometimes, but tends to dwindle as time passes. Possibilities narrow. Bender rarely comes off as cynical. However, money makes and complicates the series of small crises that must be addressed each day. Greater calamities &mdash; shootings, sudden deaths, terrorism &mdash; strike in many of Bender&rsquo;s stories, but they tend to come early in the plot. They give way, always, to ordinary life: still mundane and urgent and precarious. She likes ambiguous endings. The big trouble passes. Bills pile up. The characters go on, somehow.</p> <p>As a collection, <em>Refund </em>is uneven. It starts weak, and by its halfway point, I had mentally composed a kind of faint praise for it: &#8220;Bender is George Saunders, minus the science fiction and whatever special charm makes Saunders better than just good.&#8221; But halfway in, somewhere around its titular story, <em>Refund</em> turns toward the remarkable. Stick with it. If fiction&rsquo;s task is to distill what it was like to live in a specific time and place, I can give no better example than this, from &#8220;Refund,&#8221; which is set in New York in the weeks after 9/11:</p> <blockquote> <p>They drifted quickly from their damp new gratitude for their lives to the fact that they had to live them. One week after their return, they sat beside the pile of bills that had accumulated. They sat before the pile as though before a dozen accusations: then Josh got up and went to the closet and brought out suits that she had not seen since he was in his twenties. She was startled when she saw him, the same slim figure, but now with grey hair. Suddenly, she realized that she had stopped looking closely at herself in the mirror. She dragged out some of the dresses she had worn fifteen years ago: stretchy Lycra dresses that clung to her skin. Now she looked like a sausage exploding from its casing. She had been hostage to the absurd notion that by acting young, she would not age. The part-time jobs, the haphazard routine, had kept them mired in a state of hope, which now made it difficult to get off the odd welfare state that was the adjunct, free-lance, part-time job.</p> <p>&#8220;We were fools,&#8221; he said.</p> </blockquote> <p>&mdash; Emmett Rensin</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Counterpoint</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834052_759"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834052_759">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Turner-House-Angela-Flournoy-ebook/dp/B00LZ7GQQO/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832210&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=the+turner+house">The Turner House</a></em> by Angela Flournoy</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276429/theturnerhouse.0.jpg" alt="theturnerhouse.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276429"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p><em>The Turner House </em>has a huge cast for a book that&#8217;s fewer than 350 pages long. A family saga, it aptly begins with a family tree &mdash; one that contains four generations and more than 50 names. This can seem a little daunting, but the good news is that Angela Flournoy&#8217;s characters are so real, so cracklingly alive, that telling them apart is never a problem. The bigger challenge is getting them out of your head once you&#8217;ve finished the book; they&#8217;re apt to take up residence for weeks, squatting in your memory with the barest permission or none at all, as one of the protagonists does in her family&#8217;s Detroit home.</p> <p>The house in the novel&#8217;s title sits on Detroit&#8217;s Yarrow Street, and we are introduced to it long before the city attains its current status as a metonym for urban decay. The house was purchased with money from a job at the Chrysler plant and filled with children when a black family was still in the minority on Detroit&#8217;s East Side; its inhabitants later found themselves underwater, burdened with a mortgage worth many times its actual value, as the market crashed in 2008. The question at the heart of the novel is what they will do with it.</p> <p><em>The Turner House</em> is concerned with questions of family, origins, and home. Its present-day sections open with an eviction: The Turners&#8217; youngest daughter, Lelah, who is addicted to gambling, is kicked out of her apartment and covertly moves into her parents&#8217; now-vacant house on Yarrow Street. The novel&#8217;s historical sections start in Arkansas, which the family patriarch, Francis, left under murky circumstances once it became clear that his dream of being a pastor wouldn&#8217;t come to fruition.</p> <p>&#8220;Ain&#8217;t no haints in Detroit,&#8221; Francis says at the beginning of the story, after his son Cha-Cha battles a malevolent ghost. But Flournoy&#8217;s writing makes clear that all families, and all cities, are full of haints, the shades of the past and the present that pursue us, torment us, and might define us.</p> <p><em>The Turner House</em> contains a few unsatisfying rough edges &mdash; we never find out what happens to the house, an ambiguity that might be deliberate but is nonetheless frustrating &mdash; though Flournoy&#8217;s remarkable sense of place, ear for dialogue, and memorable characters more than make up for it. They&#8217;ll pop up in your mind, haint-like, long after you&#8217;ve turned the final page.</p> <p>&mdash; Libby Nelson</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><hr class="wp-block-separator" /><div class="chorus-snippet center"><h3>Nonfiction</h3></div><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834169_268"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834169_268">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title">WINNER: <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Between-World-Me-Ta-Nehisi-Coates-ebook/dp/B00SEFAIRI/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832380&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=between+the+world+and+me">Between the World and Me</a></em> by Ta-Nehisi Coates</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276453/betweentheworldandme.0.jpg" alt="betweentheworldandme.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276453"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Reading <em>Between the World and Me</em> a few months after its much-discussed release this summer, it occurred to me that a lot of white people had read the book to learn about themselves, or about &#8220;racism in 2015.&#8221; Stylistically and thematically, they missed the point.</p> <p>Written as a letter to Coates&#8217;s teenage son, the book reads like a literary monologue &mdash; one that&#8217;s driven by the power of Coates&#8217;s &#8220;madder but wiser&#8221; authorial voice. The persistence of that single voice throughout an entire book (even a short one) makes for an experience that&#8217;s a little like reading poetry. It can be too much, and that&#8217;s the point.</p> <p>Coates opens <em>Between the World and Me</em> with its most powerful motif: the insistent physicalization of racism as an assault on the black body. But while it can&#8217;t help but exist as a rebuke of white people, the book isn&#8217;t about racism &mdash; it&#8217;s about blackness, and in particular, black atheism.</p> <p>The most transporting section takes place at Howard University, which houses &#8220;the mecca&#8221; of black love and diversity. The &#8220;letter&#8221; conceit is most convincing and intriguing when Coates reveals a certain anxiety about raising his son in relative affluence and safety. And he reaches his fullest jeremiad fervor when condemning the black quietist slogan, &#8220;You have to be twice as good to get half as far,&#8221; or describing the alienation he feels as an atheist at a prayer service for a murdered friend.</p> <p>I admit it: I&#8217;m worried that, having won the National Book Award, <em>Between the World and Me</em> might be frozen as &#8220;a reflection of our time.&#8221; I hope enough people set it aside for the moment, and read it at a time when it can be appreciated on its own merits.</p> <p>&mdash; Dara Lind</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Spiegel &amp; Grau</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834315_373"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834315_373">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Hold-Still-Photographs-Sally-Mann-ebook/dp/B00NERQRWQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832465&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=hold+still+sally+mann">Hold Still</a></em> by Sally Mann</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276431/holdstill.0.jpg" alt="holdstill.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276431"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p><em>Hold Still</em> is not a typical memoir. Photographer Sally Mann has structured the book around candid family snapshots that accompany her prose, chronicling the most intimate details of her life in a way that&#8217;s both enlightening and offbeat.</p> <p>Raised on a sprawling farm in rural Virginia, Mann, a self-described &#8220;problem child,&#8221; goes on a journey of self-discovery that&rsquo;s punctuated by scandal, harrowing murder, and an eerie reflection on the segregated South.</p> <p>It all begins when Mann opens a box filled with old photographs and contemplates the wild and whimsical antics from her past: She refused to wear clothes until she was 5, developed an obsession with high-speed horseback riding, and almost crashed into a school bus as a reckless teen driver.</p> <p>Resenting these early signs of rebellion, her parents shipped her off to a prestigious boarding school in Vermont; there, Mann discovered her unbridled passion for photography and writing, and <em>Hold Still </em>gives readers an inside look into her early musings and beloved experience in the darkroom.</p> <p>But it is Mann&rsquo;s deep connection to her Southern roots that stitches each chapter together and serves as a critical backdrop to her life.</p> <p>She describes her unconditional love for the black woman who practically raised her, Gee-Gee, a housekeeper who worked for her family for nearly 50 years and provided a mystifying source of warmth that Mann&rsquo;s parents lacked.</p> <p>&#8220;I loved Gee-Gee the way other people love their parents, and no matter how many historical demons stalked that relationship, I know that Gee-Gee loved me back,&#8221; Mann writes of the close relationship with her childhood nanny.</p> <p>She also writes fondly of her husband, Larry, whom she met during Christmas break while a student at Bennington College, and details the struggles they endorsed as broke newlyweds after marrying on a whim at the tender ages of 19 and 21.</p> <p><em>Hold Still</em> is more than a collection of photographs; it is a refreshing visual portrait of Mann&rsquo;s lifelong experiences, captured in an endlessly fascinating journal.</p> <p>&mdash; Rachel Huggins</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Little, Brown and Company</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834474_709"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834474_709">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/If-Oceans-Were-Ink-Friendship-ebook/dp/B009WVJSO2/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832488&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=if+the+oceans+were+ink">If the Oceans Were Ink</a></em> by Carla Power</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276441/iftheoceanswereink.0.jpg" alt="iftheoceanswereink.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276441"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>The subtitle of <em>If the Oceans Were Ink</em> is &#8220;A Journey to the Heart of the Quran&#8221; &mdash; a promise that is, frankly, a lie. The book is ostensibly about Power&#8217;s year-long study of the Quran with her friend and former colleague Sheikh Mohammad Akram Nadwi (whom Power refers to as &#8220;the Sheikh&#8221;). But its true subject is Akram himself, and his friendship with Power.</p> <p>As a book about the Quran, or about Islam, <em>If the Oceans Were Ink</em> is disappointing. Power is particularly interested in topics on which she suspects that, as a secular feminist, she disagrees with traditional Islamic views. As a result, she often neglects to present Islam according to the elements of the religion that Muslims think are most important, and several major areas (like dietary restrictions) go totally undiscussed. Compounding this, Akram&#8217;s views on Islam, while conservative, are iconoclastic &mdash; especially when it comes to gender. Power is forthright about this; she clearly takes pride in how many people her friend pisses off. But it&#8217;s impossible to understand the range of Muslim opinion on a specific issue when the reader&#8217;s portal into Islamic thinking proudly speaks only for himself.</p> <p>As an interfaith dialogue, however, Power&#8217;s book succeeds. At her most insightful, she pushes against the limitations of her cosmopolitan, secular worldview and concludes that she&#8217;s not as open-minded as she initially believed. And at a time when millions of Americans could probably use a window into an Islam that isn&#8217;t the Islam they think they know &mdash; the Islam of armed jihad and &#8220;they hate us because we let women drive&#8221; &mdash; it&#8217;s difficult to argue that a book like <em>If the Oceans Were Ink</em> isn&#8217;t needed.</p> <p>&mdash; Dara Lind</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Holt Paperbacks</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834586_658"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834586_658">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Ordinary-Light-Tracy-K-Smith-ebook/dp/B00N6PBEU6/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832532&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=ordinary+light">Ordinary Light </a></em>by Tracy K. Smith</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4277409/ordinarylightbig.0.jpg" alt="ordinarylightbig.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4277409"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>You see these phrases everywhere in <em>Ordinary Light</em>, sometimes five or 10 per page: &#8220;I was grounded in a steadfast, sturdy certainty,&#8221; &#8220;the blurry outside,&#8221; &#8220;out <em>here</em>,&#8221; &#8220;the presence of a thing called Home,&#8221; &#8220;the strange zero-gravity hover of being in-between places,&#8221; &#8220;I had stepped irreversibly into a strange and fearsome dominion.&#8221;</p> <p>Superficially, Tracy K. Smith&rsquo;s book is as straightforward as memoirs come: Girl is born. Girl has childhood. Girl ages; she makes friends and loses them. She goes to school. She fears God and is wary of sex (and those roles reverse after a while). Her mom survives cancer but later dies of it. Girl becomes a poet. She&rsquo;ll win the Pulitzer Prize. The chapters progress through time. But the animating logic is physical.</p> <p>From her hometown in California to Yale and then back, Smith is and somehow always has been looking for borders: between self and other, between home and outside; feeling &#8220;grounded&#8221; in a &#8220;pocket of security&#8221; or otherwise &#8220;unmoored.&#8221; She is always coming up against ideas, in physical confrontation with thoughts and places or contending with their weight. Eventually, inevitably, these borders become less certain: The outside offers new kinds of belonging; new pockets form in unexpected places. Pain and danger grow where safety was once surest, in homes and even bodies. We strive to be <em>in </em>the world but not <em>of </em>it. This proves impossible.</p> <p>In the book&#8217;s strongest places, I found myself in conspiracy with Smith, searching for the secure and the perilous in home and school and faith and politics. I found it weakest, as Smith might say, when I came up against the hard limits of what I was willing to believe.</p> <p>Memoirists have broad license, even with the facts of their own biography, but in <em>Ordinary Light</em> Smith at least implies strict fidelity: She sometimes cuts scenes short, for example, because she doesn&#8217;t remember the particulars of a conversation or event and is not willing to invent these details. But throughout <em>Ordinary Light</em> she engages in a different kind of suspicious revision: reporting certain weighty, symbolic modes of thought about her younger self as her thoughts <em>at the time</em>. As a young child, she understands the weight of duty on her father&rsquo;s shoulders. Of seventh grade, she recalls &#8220;scanning the crowd,&#8221; trying &#8220;to gather a sense of what everyone was becoming and where the children we&rsquo;d so recently been had gone.&#8221; That&rsquo;s heavy for a 12-year-old.</p> <p>Perhaps those inventions are necessary. Memoirs have had a tough couple of decades; commercially they are more viable than ever, but the critical and literary communities have become suspicious. Memoirs are solipsistic, narcissistic, myopic &mdash; in 2011, Neil Genzlinger <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2011/01/30/books/review/Genzlinger-t.html?pagewanted=all&amp;_r=0">begged</a> &#8220;a moment of silence&#8221; for &#8220;the lost art of shutting up.&#8221; Late last year Jonathan Yardley <a href="https://www.washingtonpost.com/opinions/review-epilogue-a-memoir-by-will-boast/2014/09/12/0e21f5a2-2d3e-11e4-994d-202962a9150c_story.html">diagnosed</a> memoir as an MFA-borne illness, &#8220;writing-school&#8221; books, filled &#8220;with all the self-absorption those places encourage.&#8221;</p> <p>So perhaps 10-year-old Tracy must, even in memory, interpret the world the way an adult poet would. The bulk of <em>Ordinary Light</em> occurs during Smith&rsquo;s childhood, and while adult Smith&rsquo;s stature and accomplishments might make her story worthy of enough interest to evade the cheapest accusations of narcissism, the experience of being young does not frequently escape navel-gazing. <em>Ordinary Light </em>is history, but it is a book and artwork first. It is something that must be held together by motifs sustained across hundreds of pages, something its author hopes will be worthy and interesting.</p> <p>It is.</p> <p>&mdash; Emmett Rensin</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Knopf</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834691_767"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834691_767">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Soul-Octopus-Surprising-Exploration-Consciousness/dp/1451697716/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832562&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=the+soul+of+an+octopus">The Soul of an Octopus: A Surprising Exploration into the Wonder of Consciousness</a></em> by Sy Montgomery</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276427/thesoulofanoctopus.0.jpg" alt="thesoulofanoctopus.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276427"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>For most of the 20th century, it was considered taboo in scientific circles to talk about how animals &#8220;think&#8221; or &#8220;feel.&#8221; You could study behavior, sure. But no self-respecting researcher would say things like, &#8220;My cat is getting jealous&#8221; or, &#8220;Your dog sympathizes with you.&#8221; That would be sloppy anthropomorphism &mdash; or, worse, romanticism.</p> <p>Happily, that&#8217;s been changing lately. It&#8217;s getting harder to deny that other species often display keen intelligence and intricate emotions. Scientists have amassed evidence that dogs <a href="http://www.npr.org/sections/health-shots/2014/02/21/280640267/how-dogs-read-our-moods-emotion-detector-found-in-fidos-brain">can read our moods</a>, that rats <a href="http://news.sciencemag.org/brain-behavior/2014/06/rats-regret-bad-decisions">can regret bad decisions</a>, that chimpanzees <a href="http://news.nationalgeographic.com/news/2012/10/121004-animals-depression-health-science/">can suffer depression</a>.</p> <p>But perhaps the strangest of all animal minds to contemplate is that of the octopus. In her delightful <a href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Soul-Octopus-Exploration-Consciousness/dp/1451697716"><em>The Soul of an Octopus</em></a>, writer Sy Montgomery spends three years in the company of these eight-limbed invertebrates, riveted by what seems like a genuinely alien consciousness.</p> <p>Octopuses are the brainiest mollusks in the ocean, and they behave in all sorts of ways that seem eerily familiar. They recognize and remember faces, shunning people they dislike. They play games, they solve puzzles, and they&#8217;re one of the few species (along with dogs) that understand pointing. They&#8217;re so clever at fooling predators through ruses and disguises that a few experts wonder if octopuses possess some sort of theory of mind, a hallmark of human intelligence.</p> <p>Yet they&#8217;re about as different from us as can be, biologically speaking. Rather than a single brain, their neurons are spread throughout their entire bodies, concentrated in arms and suckers. What is it like to be an octopus? We haven&#8217;t a clue, and straining for similarities to human behavior can only go so far.</p> <p>What makes this book unusual is that Montgomery doesn&#8217;t try to answer this question by sifting through piles of research. Instead, she &#8230; listens. She develops extensive relationships with a handful of individual octopuses at the New England Aquarium, each with its own personality, its mundane dramas and tragedies. She records every small moment, treating each octopus like a character in a Jane Austen novel. The effect is wonderful. By the end, it&#8217;s hard to shake the feeling that these bizarre creatures really do have rich internal lives, even if we still lack the imagination to grasp them entirely.</p> <p>&mdash; Brad Plumer</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Atria Books</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><hr class="wp-block-separator" /><div class="chorus-snippet center"><h3>Poetry</h3></div><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835348_846"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835348_846">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title">WINNER: <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Voyage-Sable-Venus-Other-Poems-ebook/dp/B00TWEMFVM/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832349&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=the+voyage+of+the+sable+venus">Voyage of the Sable Venus and Other Poems</a></em> by Robin Coste Lewis</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276435/voyageofthesablevenus.0.jpg" alt="voyageofthesablevenus.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276435"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>The centerpiece of <em>Voyage of the Sable Venus</em> is the epic poem of the same name, a piece that&#8217;s more successful in its totality than in any given part. The primary subject of Lewis&#8217;s poems is the struggle to live as a black woman in the United States (and in the world), and in the title work she&#8217;s crafted her magnum opus.</p> <p>&#8220;Voyage&#8221; sprawls on for dozens of pages, assembled entirely from descriptions of art objects depicting black women from millennia ago, right up through the present day. Lewis has changed the punctuation of these descriptions and assembled them into a narrative that roughly traces the history of black progress, but she has not radically altered the wording or phrasing.</p> <p>At first, this approach can seem like a clever gimmick, an interesting way for Lewis to get at her major theme. But the longer the poem continues, the more it sinks beneath the skin. And once it&#8217;s over, the impact is undeniable: These are all the ways that black women have been described, and all too often they&#8217;ve been robbed of their own power to describe themselves. In individual moments, the poem is enraging or humorous or moving, but its overall effect is chilling. It feels like the mountain of history swallowing a solitary figure whole.</p> <p>But there&#8217;s so much else going on in <em>Voyage of the Sable Venus</em> as well. I was particularly taken with &#8220;On the Road to Sri Bhuvaneshwari,&#8221; the lengthy poem that is placed second in the collection and contrasts the narrator of the past (who is on the titular journey) with the narrator of the present, who looks back on that self with melancholy wonder. Of particular note is a section featuring a stillborn buffalo. It&#8217;s a knockout.</p> <p>&mdash; Todd VanDerWerff</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Knopf</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834878_311"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834878_311">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/s/ref=nb_sb_ss_i_1_11?url=search-alias%3Dstripbooks&amp;field-keywords=bright+dead+things&amp;sprefix=bright+dead%2Cstripbooks%2C243">Bright Dead Things</a></em> by Ada Lim&oacute;n</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276455/brightdeadthings.0.jpg" alt="brightdeadthings.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276455"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Ada Lim&oacute;n pees while standing up, or at least her narrator does. This collection of poems, centering on a New Yorker who&#8217;s new to rural life (fields and a lover and a dog), sometimes boasts an enjoyable lady badassery that you don&rsquo;t see in poetry every day.</p> <p>But there&rsquo;s also a self-conscious undercurrent:</p> <p>&#8220;<em>How do you love? </em>/ Like a fist. Like a knife. / But I want to be more like a weed, / a small frog trembling in air.&#8221;</p> <p>You can sometimes hear the narrator fighting with herself, such as when she talks about the &#8220;bright dead things&#8221; of the book&rsquo;s title &mdash; carrots that she, as a child, ripped out too soon from a family garden. &#8220;I&rsquo;m thirty-five and remember all that I&rsquo;ve done wrong. / &hellip; Why must we practice / this surrender? What I mean is: there are days / I still want to kill the carrots because I can.&#8221;</p> <p>And I&rsquo;d be remiss if I didn&rsquo;t quote liberally from &#8220;How to Triumph Like a Girl,&#8221; a poem about watching a horse race, which opens the book:</p> <blockquote> <p>But mainly, let&rsquo;s be honest, I like</p> <p>that they&rsquo;re ladies. As if this big</p> <p>dangerous animal is also a part of me,</p> <p>that somewhere inside the delicate</p> <p>skin of my body, there pumps</p> <p>an 8-pound female horse heart,</p> <p>[&hellip;] that thinks, no it knows,</p> <p>it&rsquo;s going to come in first.</p> </blockquote> <p>What I&rsquo;m trying to say is: These poems are delicious.</p> <p>&mdash; Susannah Locke</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Milkweed Editions</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447834984_158"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447834984_158">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Catalog-Unabashed-Gratitude-Pitt-Poetry-ebook/dp/B00SG7UGDA/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832272&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=catalog+of+unabashed+gratitude">Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude</a></em> by Ross Gay</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276447/catalogofunabashedgratitude.0.jpg" alt="catalogofunabashedgratitude.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276447"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Inside the poet&rsquo;s head is &#8220;the factory / where loss makes all things / beautiful grow.&#8221; And that&rsquo;s surely an appropriate description of this collection from Ross Gay, where the simple joys of gardening and daily life often stumble into death.</p> <p>For example, &#8220;Ode to Buttoning and Unbuttoning My Shirt&#8221; ends up referencing a car bomb and the &#8220;delicacy [&hellip;] of my fingers / with which I will / one day close / my mother&rsquo;s eyes.&#8221;</p> <p>And at the end of a meditation on the narrator&rsquo;s ugly feet and an old friend: &#8220;but do you really think I&rsquo;m talking to you about my feet? / Of course she&rsquo;s dead: Tina was her name, of leukemia: so I heard&mdash; / why else would I try sadly to make music of her unremarkable kindness?&#8221;</p> <p>But if you&rsquo;re getting the sense that this collection is a downer, then I apologize for describing it wrong. (Gay also likes to break the fourth wall, to acknowledge that his narrator chose the wrong metaphor, for instance.) <em>Catalog of Unabashed Gratitude</em>, as its title suggests, is ultimately a full-force celebration of life.</p> <p>&mdash; Susannah Locke</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: University of Pittsburgh Press</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835105_484"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835105_484">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Elegy-Broken-Machine-Patrick-Phillips-ebook/dp/B00N6PD4OK/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832301&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=elegy+for+a+broken+machine">Elegy for a Broken Machine: Poems</a></em> by Patrick Phillips</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276457/elegyforabrokenmachine.0.jpg" alt="elegyforabrokenmachine.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276457"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>The first thing you&#8217;ll notice about Patrick Phillips&#8217;s slim but devastating collection <em>Elegy for a Broken Machine</em> is that its poems pack a visceral, physical punch.</p> <p>They are divided among three sections, and the first focuses on the waning of Phillips&#8217;s father&#8217;s life, with the poet casting an eye upon a body that is failing, medicine&#8217;s attempts to save it, and, ultimately, its new status as a corpse. These are poems marked by incisive, perfectly chosen images of a man&#8217;s physicality, the way the body breaks down due to disease or age or simple accident.</p> <p>Writing about a surgery in &#8220;Elegy Outside the ICU,&#8221; Phillips concludes:</p> <blockquote> <p>as for the second time<br>since dawn they skirted<br>the ruined arteries</p> <p>with a long blue length<br>of vein that someone<br>had unlaced from his leg</p> <p>so that by almost every definition<br>my father died<br>there on the table</p> <p>and came back in the body<br>of his own father,<br>or his mother at the end</p> </blockquote> <p>His father&#8217;s condition is Phillips&#8217;s jumping-off point, but he ruminates on death in all its forms, whether of a person or simply a piece of yourself. In another memorable poem, Phillips considers how, because he&#8217;s no longer a smoker and thus no longer enjoys the instant sense of camaraderie with other smokers that takes hold as they stand outside to indulge together, he feels as if his life is lesser somehow.</p> <p>Lest this sound too grim, however, <em>Elegy</em> also celebrates life, as in a lovely ode to a mother singing to calm her baby, a song &#8220;that would sound the same ten / thousand years ago, / and has no / meaning but to calm.&#8221;</p> <p>Mortality and maturity, life and death are not new themes for poets to consider, but collections like Phillips&#8217;s latest make it obvious why they keep returning to such oft-tilled soil: This is where we find what makes us human.</p> <p>&mdash; Todd VanDerWerff</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Knopf</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835249_164"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835249_164">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/How-Be-Drawn-Poets-Penguin-ebook/dp/B00L9B7SNQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832321&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=how+to+be+drawn">How to Be Drawn</a></em> by Terrance Hayes</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276437/howtobedrawn.0.jpg" alt="howtobedrawn.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276437"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Raw. Riveting. Refreshing. These are the words that best describe Terrance Hayes&#8217;s gripping collection of poems that hold a magnifying glass to the experience of being black in America.</p> <p>The 2014 MacArthur Fellow brings a new, experimental element to American poetry, both in subject matter and in delivery.</p> <p>&#8220;We are on the side of Good God as well as the side of Goddamn,&#8221; Hayes writes in the poem titled &#8220;Self-portrait as the Mind of a Camera,&#8221; an honest assessment of the inexplicable tightrope African Americans walk on a daily basis.</p> <p>With colorful language and clever wordplay, Hayes carves out his own space to examine the intersection of art and race, from the influence of hip-hop music and pop culture to confederacy in the South to police violence and the impact of the black church.</p> <p>In one of his most introspective poems, &#8220;Model Prison Model,&#8221; Hayes envisions a life caged in misery, one he might have lived if he took up the traditional profession of his family members &mdash; that of a correctional officer &mdash; instead of becoming a poet.</p> <blockquote> <p>I feel like this is a good time to tell you</p> <p>My parents and first cousin have worked</p> <p>Decades as prison guards. Nonetheless,</p> <p>When I, a black male poet, was asked</p> <p> </p> <p>To participate in the construction of this vision,</p> <p>I was surprised. During the uninspired years</p> <p>I smoked so much I would have set myself aflame</p> <p>Had I not been weeping half the time.</p> <p> </p> <p>I am told when my uncle was an inmate</p> <p>My father often found him cowering in his cell</p> <p>Like a folded rag. You will note the imposing</p> <p>Guard towers at each corner of the prison.</p> </blockquote> <p>If you want to gain a deeper understanding of the US&#8217;s fragile race relations or to explore the nuances of racial identity, <em>How to Be Drawn</em> is a must-read.</p> <p>&mdash; Rachel Huggins</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Penguin Books</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><hr class="wp-block-separator" /><div class="chorus-snippet center"><h3>Young Adult Literature</h3></div><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835654_792"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835654_792">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title">WINNER: <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Challenger-Deep-Neal-Shusterman-ebook/dp/B00M70ESPO/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832663&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=challenger+deep">Challenger Deep</a></em> by Neal Shusterman</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276443/challengerdeep.0.jpg" alt="challengerdeep.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276443"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p><em>Challenger Deep</em> mines the trauma of mental illness with a haunting story of a 15-year-old plunging into schizophrenia and then slowly climbing out. It is a tale of two worlds: that of Caden Bosch&rsquo;s upended reality, where he&rsquo;s surrounded by bewildered family and friends; and that of Caden&rsquo;s mind, aboard a pirate ship at sea headed toward the deepest point in the Pacific Ocean: Challenger Deep.</p> <p>The real-life Challenger Deep in the Mariana Trench has become a fascination for explorers desperate to reach the bottom. In Neal Shusterman&#8217;s novel, both the sailor Caden and the teenage Caden are not quite so keen to descend into the depths. The two Cadens&#8217; stories are purposefully disjointed, uniting only in small details &mdash; a gold coin, a bundle of maps, blue hair &mdash; clues that creep out of the chaos. Slowly, a mystery begins to emerge: What in Caden&rsquo;s real life inspires the shadows at sea? And how can he find his way back to shore?</p> <p>What makes <em>Challenger Deep </em>so devastating, powerful, and potent is revealed in the final author&rsquo;s note, where Shusterman writes that the story &#8220;is by no means a work of fiction.&#8221; Shusterman explored the experience of his own son Brendan&rsquo;s struggle with mental illness to create Caden&rsquo;s tale.</p> <p>The story is an intense collaboration between father and son. Brendan helped his father with the depiction of desperately needing a &#8220;mental cast&#8221; for a broken brain. And pivotal scenes are laced with Brendan&rsquo;s artwork, all of it created during his initial struggles with schizophrenia.</p> <p>Ultimately, <em>Challenger Deep </em>is a love story that Shusterman wrote for his son. Every page betrays a parent captivated by his child&rsquo;s every step, even when those steps may lead down the most dangerous of paths.</p> <p>&mdash; Melissa Bell</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: HarperTeen</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835538_454"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835538_454">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Bone-Gap-Laura-Ruby-ebook/dp/B00KVI77JI/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832645&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=bone+gap">Bone Gap</a></em> by Laura Ruby</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4277411/bonegapbig.0.jpg" alt="bonegapbig.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4277411"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Part rural noir, part magical realism, and part exploration of a very real psychological condition, Laura Ruby&#8217;s <em>Bone Gap</em> is an engrossing and enjoyable read.</p> <p>Set in the small town of Bone Gap, Illinois, the book follows teenager Finn O&#8217;Sullivan as he tries to solve the disappearance of his brother&#8217;s girlfriend Roza. Finn is on his own in this endeavor, because the townspeople think he&#8217;s odd, and his protestations that he saw Roza being kidnapped are strangely lacking in detail &mdash; so no one believes him.</p> <p>As is revealed early on, Roza has indeed been kidnapped, and she becomes our secondary protagonist. She&#8217;s no mere damsel in distress for Finn to save. We learn about her past, watch her try to escape her situation, and eventually see her make a shocking choice.</p> <p>Beneath the noir and magical trappings, Ruby&#8217;s real interest is physical appearance. Roza has been abducted because her kidnapper believes she is the most beautiful woman he&#8217;s ever seen. Meanwhile, the handsome Finn falls for his classmate Priscilla &#8220;Petey&#8221; Willis, who is generally considered quite ugly. This sparks gossip and skepticism about Finn&#8217;s intentions, which are eventually revealed in a twist that&#8217;s expertly set up and key to these larger themes.</p> <p>Even early on, the book is filled with memorable imagery &mdash; endless stalks of corn, a mysterious white horse, a beekeeper swarmed by her charges. Then as the story progresses, the real world surrenders more and more to the strangeness of magical realism.</p> <p>And while the characters experience some disturbing and serious ordeals, things never get <em>too</em> grim. Ruby sympathizes with the underdogs and the oddballs &mdash; and explores what happens when they see things that everyone else misses.</p> <p>&mdash; Andrew Prokop</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Balzer + Bray</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835729_199"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835729_199">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Most-Dangerous-Ellsberg-History-Vietnam-ebook/dp/B00V39P8Z4/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832688&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=most+dangerous+daniel+ellsberg+and+the+secret+history+of+the+vietnam+war">Most Dangerous: Daniel Ellsberg and the Secret History of the Vietnam War</a></em> by Steve Sheinkin</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276439/mostdangerous.0.jpg" alt="mostdangerous.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276439"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Steve Sheinkin has made a name for himself as a writer of plot-driven historical nonfiction for younger readers, penning fast-paced biographies that double as histories of pivotal moments in American history. In <em>Most Dangerous</em>, his fourth book in this vein, he profiles Daniel Ellsberg, who leaked the Pentagon Papers &mdash; a.k.a. the government&#8217;s secret history of what had gone wrong during the Vietnam War &mdash; to the media.</p> <p>It&#8217;s a timely subject; Ellsberg was the Edward Snowden of the 1970s, and <em>Most Dangerous </em>will enthrall even those adults who already have a basic understanding of that period in history. The story clips along from the beginning of the Vietnam War through the American withdrawal, and details Ellsberg&#8217;s realization that not only was the conflict a disaster but the highest levels of government knew it and weren&#8217;t telling the public.</p> <p><em>Most Dangerous </em>handily navigates its complex subject matter, from the clouded beginnings of the Vietnam War through the Watergate break-in &mdash; and it does so with clarity and vigor. While the material requires at least a middle school level knowledge of how the US government works, the prose is straightforward, even for a young adult work. Sometimes this helps to simplify a complex subject and make the story tick along like a thriller; other times, particularly when it comes to dialogue or dealing with the inner lives of the people Sheinkin profiles, it can seem a little patronizing.</p> <p>Mostly, though, Sheinkin&#8217;s clear writing and succinct presentation could be a lesson for writers of adult biographies. His eye for the telling detail and the innate tension even in a moment long past &mdash; how a burglar faked a limp, or how painfully the moments passed while the New York Times&#8217;s copies of the Pentagon Papers went to press &mdash; mean that even readers who know the story will learn plenty from his recounting of it.</p> <p>&mdash; Libby Nelson</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Roaring Brook Press</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835812_807"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835812_807">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Nimona-Noelle-Stevenson-ebook/dp/B00N0W1XGU/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832708&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=nimona">Nimona</a></em> by Noelle Stevenson</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276425/nimona.0.jpg" alt="nimona.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276425"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Nimona and her boss, local villain Ballister Blackheart, live in a universe that allows seemingly disparate worlds to collide with a cheeky wink. Knights joust, and dragons are an ongoing concern, but their main adversary is a shadowy government presence that&#8217;s enforcing a strict surveillance state and weaponizing sensitive material in sleek tech labs. Also: Nimona is a shape shifter.</p> <p>The story &mdash; which takes the form of a graphic novel &mdash; is essentially a mashup that incorporates author Noelle Stevenson&#8217;s many favorite elements of fantasy and science fiction.</p> <p><em>Nimona</em> began as a web comic on Stevenson&#8217;s wildly popular <a href="http://gingerhaze.tumblr.com/">Tumblr</a>, where she quickly amassed followers by drawing playful cartoons of characters from fan-friendly properties ranging from <em>The</em> <em>Lord of the Rings</em> to <em><a href="http://gingerhaze.tumblr.com/tagged/badass-scooby-gang">Scooby Doo</a></em>. She has a knack for pinpointing the aspects of these beloved works that fans love most, because she herself is an unapologetic fan.</p> <p>It&#8217;s this passionate investment in fandom that makes Stevenson well-equipped to dive deeper and to travel in more unexpected directions than you might expect. While <em>Nimona</em> starts off as an exaggerated take on existing character tropes &mdash; the reluctant villain, the enthusiastic sidekick, the self-righteous hero &mdash; it eventually hits its stride by delving into what makes these people (and shape shifters) tick.</p> <p>You can feel the restraints of <em>Nimona</em>&#8216;s original weekly rollout, as chapters tend to end with either pat conclusions or jarringly dramatic flourishes. But Stevenson&#8217;s wit and compassion shine through, whether through her endearing illustrations (as seen in Blackheart&#8217;s spiky build versus Nimona&#8217;s rounded frame) or her endlessly imaginative world. Part of me wishes I had read <em>Nimona</em> in its original web comic form, if only because my visit with Nimona and Blackheart could have lasted more than just two hours.</p> <p>&mdash; Caroline Framke</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: HarperTeen</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- BEGIN LISTICLE SNIPPET --><div class="m-listicle js-social-item small-image " id="1447835899_396"> <div class="m-listicle__header"><div class="m-listicle__social"> <a href="#1447835899_396">&#59401;</a> <a data-analytics-social="facebook" href="https://www.facebook.com/sharer/sharer.php?" class="js-button-social facebook">&#59394;</a> <a data-analytics-social="twitter" href="https://twitter.com/intent/tweet?" class="js-button-social twitter">&#59395;</a> </div></div> <h3 class="js-social-title"> <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Thing-About-Jellyfish-Ali-Benjamin-ebook/dp/B00RTY0EPQ/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&amp;ie=UTF8&amp;qid=1447832725&amp;sr=1-1&amp;keywords=the+thing+about+jellyfish">The Thing About Jellyfish</a></em> by Ali Benjamin</h3> <div class="m-listicle__image small-image"><img src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/4276421/thethingaboutjellyfish.0.jpg" alt="thethingaboutjellyfish.0.jpg" data-chorus-asset-id="4276421"></div> <div class="m-listicle__content"> <p>Ali Benjamin&#8217;s debut novel showcases many of her gifts as a science writer. Her factual descriptions of jellyfish &mdash; which figure heavily in the novel&#8217;s plot &mdash; are beautiful and neatly showcase the sea creatures&#8217; alien features and wondrous natures.</p> <p>But the real pleasure is in how she&#8217;s able to weave those factual descriptions into a longer, larger work about a young girl trying to cope with her own feelings of grief and guilt after her former best friend dies.</p> <p>Suzy has always been one of those kids who doesn&#8217;t know how to fit in. And back when Franny was around, that didn&#8217;t matter. But as the two girls grew older, they grew apart, and on the last day of sixth grade, a horrible incident tore a rift between them. Then Franny drowned while on vacation over the summer &mdash; and when <em>The Thing About Jellyfish</em> opens, a month after the tragedy, Suzy is struggling to accept that there will be no forgiveness, no chance to make things right. It&#8217;s a realization that drives her to stop speaking entirely.</p> <p>The story alternates between Suzy&#8217;s attempts to grapple with grief in the present and brief flashbacks to her friendship with Franny in the past, building mystery and deepening the novel&#8217;s core relationships. Benjamin does a skillful job of weaving Suzy&#8217;s inner monologue into darker and darker territory, as the character&#8217;s thoughts wander far afield of what normal 12-year-olds might be thinking about. She also ably handles simultaneous builds in the present-day story, as Suzy tries to figure out just how a strong swimmer like Franny could have drowned, and in the past, as she builds inexorably to the girls&#8217; split. While it can occasionally feel as if Suzy has no self-awareness whatsoever, more often than not, Benjamin makes this seem charming rather than irritating.</p> <p>And she always has her fascination with studying jellyfish, strange and haunted, to fall back on. They&#8217;re everything Suzy&#8217;s not, ethereal and graceful and maybe even deadly. That just might be why she&#8217;s so drawn to them.</p> <p>&mdash; Todd VanDerWerff</p> <p class="m-listicle__credit">Image credit: Little, Brown Books for Young Readers</p> </div> </div><!-- END LISTICLE SNIPPET --><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --><div class="chorus-snippet credits"> <hr> <div class="credits-content"> <div>Editor: <a href="http://twitter.com/jeffur">Jen Trolio</a> </div> <div>Copy Editor: <a href="https://twitter.com/tanyapai">Tanya Pai</a> </div> <!-- ##### REPLACE TITLE LINK AND NAME ##### --> </div> </div><!-- ######## END SNIPPET ######## --><ul class="m-related-links" data-analytics-placement="bottom"> <h3>Learn more</h3> <li class="related-links-item"><a data-analytics-link="related" class="related-links-link" href="http://www.vox.com/2014/11/19/7246149/national-book-award-nominee-reviews"><div class="related-links-item-image"></div> <div class="related-links-item-highlight"></div> <div class="related-links-item-headline">We read all 20 National Book Award nominees. Here&#8217;s what we thought.</div></a></li> <li class="related-links-item"><a data-analytics-link="related" class="related-links-link" href="http://www.vox.com/2015/10/14/9519855/a-little-life"><div class="related-links-item-image"></div> <div class="related-links-item-highlight"></div> <div class="related-links-item-headline">A Little Life is the best novel of the year. I wouldn&rsquo;t recommend it to anyone.</div></a></li> <li class="related-links-item"><a data-analytics-link="related" class="related-links-link" href="http://www.vox.com/2015/10/7/9469151/best-science-fiction-fantasy-stories"><div class="related-links-item-image"></div> <div class="related-links-item-highlight"></div> <div class="related-links-item-headline">10 of the best science fiction and fantasy short stories ever</div></a></li> </ul><p></p>
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			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
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			<title type="html"><![CDATA[The eccentric lawmaker who helped end Nebraska&#8217;s death penalty once sued God and compared cops to ISIS]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/5/28/8681849/death-penalty-nebraska-ernie-chambers" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/5/28/8681849/death-penalty-nebraska-ernie-chambers</id>
			<updated>2019-03-04T21:50:31-05:00</updated>
			<published>2015-05-28T16:30:02-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="archives" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[Nebraska state Sen. Ernie Chambers is a lawmaker with a serious mission: abolishing the death penalty in his incredibly conservative state. It only took 37 tries. Chambers is a bit of a character in Nebraska politics. The independent from Omaha, who is the state&#8217;s longest-serving legislator and its first African-American senator, is an eccentric lawmaker. [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<img alt="" data-caption="Nebraska state Senator Ernie Chambers attends the AMPAS hosts a screening of &quot;A Time For Burning&quot; at the Academy Theater on October 20, 2008, in New York City. | Bryan Bedder/Getty Images" data-portal-copyright="Bryan Bedder/Getty Images" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/15384425/GettyImages-83362574.0.1538793929.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
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	Nebraska state Senator Ernie Chambers attends the AMPAS hosts a screening of "A Time For Burning" at the Academy Theater on October 20, 2008, in New York City. | Bryan Bedder/Getty Images	</figcaption>
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<p>Nebraska state Sen. Ernie Chambers is a lawmaker with a serious mission: abolishing the death penalty in his incredibly conservative state. It only took 37 tries.</p>

<p>Chambers is a bit of a character in Nebraska politics. The independent from Omaha, who is the state&#8217;s longest-serving legislator and its first African-American senator, is an eccentric lawmaker. Fusion&#8217;s Collier Meyerson offers a <a href="http://fusion.net/story/140807/meet-ernie-chambers-who-led-nebraskas-death-penalty-ban-and-also-sued-god-once/">fascinating rundown</a> of some of his political accomplishments and antics, including the fact that he <a href="http://usatoday30.usatoday.com/news/offbeat/2007-09-18-God-suit_N.htm">sued God</a> in 2007<strong> </strong>to make a point about<strong> </strong>frivolous lawsuits, set off a wave of criticism last month for <a href="http://watchdog.org/207981/isis/">comparing US police officers to ISIS</a> during a hearing on a concealed-gun bill, and eschews suits for T-shirts during legislative sessions.</p>

<p>But what will perhaps define the colorful state senator now is his tireless fight to end the death penalty in his state. Chambers told the Los Angeles Times that he has tried to get rid of capital punishment in Nebraska<a href="http://www.latimes.com/nation/la-na-nebraska-death-penalty-veto-20150526-story.html"> 37 times</a>.</p>

<p>&#8220;The public has grave misgivings about the number of exonerations of people on death row,&#8221; he told the Times, adding, &#8220;the number of exonerations proves that some people have been wrongly executed.&#8221;</p>

<p>On Wednesday, Chambers&#8217;s four-decade push paid off when Nebraska became the first conservative state in more than 40 years to<a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/5/27/8673705/nebraska-death-penalty"> abolish the death penalty</a>, after state lawmakers overrode Republican Gov. Pete Ricketts&rsquo;s veto.</p>

<p>The Nebraska vote comes in a period when a <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/3/27/8301357/death-penalty-lethal-injection">shortage of lethal injection drugs</a> has left many states scrambling to find alternative ways to carry out executions as supplies run out, and public support for capital punishment has waned, reaching <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/4/18/8447779/death-penalty-survey">its lowest point in 40 years</a>.</p>

<p>Nebraska now joins 18 other states and Washington, DC, in abolishing the death penalty.</p>

<p>This map below outlines the nation&rsquo;s executions since 1976, the year the death penalty was reinstated by the Supreme Court.</p>
<p><a href="http://www.pewresearch.org/fact-tank/2015/04/29/5-facts-about-the-death-penalty/executionsbystate/"><img width="640" height="467" src="http://www.pewresearch.org/files/2015/04/executionsbystate.gif" class="attachment-large" alt="state by state executions death penalty texas"></a></p>
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									</content>
			
					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[Watch: Homeless people in LA&#8217;s Skid Row get a well-deserved night of fun, karaoke-style]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/5/25/8644691/homeless-karaoke" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/5/25/8644691/homeless-karaoke</id>
			<updated>2019-03-04T21:19:40-05:00</updated>
			<published>2015-05-25T10:00:02-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Labor" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Money" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Policy" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Poverty" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[Los Angeles&#8217;s notorious Skid Row feels like death row for the 1,700 down-and-out souls who sleep on sidewalks and in cardboard boxes along the streets. But for one night every week, many of them can break free and hit some high notes at a karaoke night held at a church in the heart of the [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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						<p>Los Angeles&#8217;s notorious Skid Row feels like death row for the 1,700 down-and-out souls who sleep on sidewalks and in cardboard boxes along the streets.</p>

<p>But for one night every week, many of them can break free and hit some high notes at a karaoke night held at a church in the heart of the poverty-stricken neighborhood.</p>

<p>In the Associated Press video above, people from all walks of life belt out soulful tunes, pour their pain about their personal struggles into the mic, and relish in five minutes of fame. These joyous moments will make your heart melt.</p>

<p>Pastor Tony Stallworth of the Community Church of the Nazarene, where the karaoke night is held, was once homeless and addicted to drugs, and has made it his mission for the past 17 years to uplift the spirits of a segment of the population that&#8217;s ignored, marginalized, and neglected on a daily basis.</p>

<p>&#8220;I was on drugs for like 20 years and I ended up homeless and pushing a basket with everything that I owned in it,&#8221; he tells the AP. &#8220;We want to make sure people feel the love that we have for them. I really honestly love them, I don&rsquo;t care what kind of shape you&rsquo;re in because I was in that shape.&#8221;</p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">LA’s homelessness problem is getting worse</h2>
<p>A <a href="http://documents.lahsa.org/Planning/homelesscount/2015/HC2015CommissionPresentation.pdf">report </a>released this month by the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority, the agency tasked with addressing homelessness in the LA area, found that the number of homeless residents in both the city and county of LA jumped 12 percent in the past two years.</p>

<p>In LA county, 44,359 homeless people were counted in January 2015, up from 39,461 in 2013. And more than half &mdash; 25,686 &mdash; were in the city of Los Angeles &mdash; which has been dubbed the homeless capital of the United States.</p>

<p>But what&#8217;s even more devastating is that the report found that the number of tents, makeshift encampments &mdash; like the ones found on Skid Row &mdash; and vehicles with people living in them soared 85 percent, from 5,335 in 2013 to 9,535.</p>

<p>The figures show that homelessness is increasing not only in expected places like downtown LA&rsquo;s poverty-stricken Skid Row but across the county in every district.</p>

<p>&#8220;California was one of the hardest-hit states in the country during the economic recession, suffering high unemployment and high job losses,&#8221; the Los Angeles Homeless Services Authority said in a news release. &#8220;There is a lag in rebound, and the working poor and low-income individuals have been hit particularly hard, with the trifecta of unemployment, stagnant wages and a lack of affordable housing.&#8221;</p>

<p>The city of Los Angeles spends $100 million a year dealing with its homeless population, the LA Times <a href="http://www.latimes.com/local/lanow/la-me-ln-homeless-cao-report-20150416-story.html">reported</a> in April. But most of the funds (up to $87 million) go toward law enforcement costs like policing and patrolling &mdash; not actually housing the people who need it most.</p>

<p>However, <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/5/30/5764096/its-three-times-cheaper-to-give-housing-to-the-homeless-than-to-keep">studies</a> suggest it is more cost-effective to combat homelessness by providing long-term housing than it is to keep people on the streets &mdash; where they are bound to jump from shelter to shelter, or end up in emergency rooms and jails.</p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Which states have the worst rates of homelessness?</h2><p>Homelessness is, of course, not a problem unique to LA. It plagues cities and states across the nation &mdash; <a href="https://www.hudexchange.info/resources/documents/ahar-2013-part1.pdf">more than 600,000 Americans on a single night in 2013</a>.</p>
<p>And despite the harmful stigma of homeless people and their desire to work, 17 percent of homeless adults in families had paying jobs and 55 percent were employed during the previous year, according to a 2013 US Department of Housing and Urban Development <a href="http://www.huduser.org/portal/family_options_study.html#impact-overview-tab">study</a>.</p>

<p>This map below compiled by <a href="http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2015/4/21/attacking-homelessness-with-rapid-rehousing">Tim Henderson at Stateline</a>, a Pew Charitable Trusts reporting outlet, gives an idea of how homelessness stacks up in each state.</p>

<p>Hawaii, known as a tropical paradise, has the highest homelessness rate (487 homeless people per 100,000 residents) in the US. That&#8217;s followed by New York and Nevada.</p>
<p></p><p></p><div class="tableauPlaceholder"> &amp;amp;lt;a href=&#8221;http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2015/4/21/attacking-homelessness-with-rapid-rehousing&#8221; mce_href=&#8221;http://www.pewtrusts.org/en/research-and-analysis/blogs/stateline/2015/4/21/attacking-homelessness-with-rapid-rehousing&#8221;&amp;amp;gt;&amp;amp;lt;img alt=&#8221;Homeless &#8221; src=&#8221;https://public.tableau.com/static/images/Ho/Homeless/Homeless/1_rss.png&#8221; mce_src=&#8221;https://public.tableau.com/static/images/Ho/Homeless/Homeless/1_rss.png&#8221; style=&#8221;border: none&#8221; mce_style=&#8221;border: none&#8221;&amp;amp;gt;&amp;amp;lt;/a&amp;amp;gt; <object>            </object> </div>
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									</content>
			
					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[A black Republican&#8217;s dilemma: How to fix police without big government]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/5/24/8646857/tim-scott-body-cameras" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/5/24/8646857/tim-scott-body-cameras</id>
			<updated>2019-03-04T21:21:46-05:00</updated>
			<published>2015-05-24T12:00:02-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Criminal Justice" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Policy" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[When I heard that Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) was pushing to get congressional funding for police body cameras after the deaths of Walter Scott, Freddie Gray and countless other unarmed black men who&#8217;ve died at the hands of white cops, I was uplifted. Scott is one of just two black lawmakers in the Senate. He&#8217;s [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<img alt="" data-caption="NAMM members meet with Sen. Tim Scott and his staff in the Hart Senate Office Building. | Kris Connor/Getty Images" data-portal-copyright="Kris Connor/Getty Images" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/15378553/GettyImages-474115636.0.1538793929.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
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	NAMM members meet with Sen. Tim Scott and his staff in the Hart Senate Office Building. | Kris Connor/Getty Images	</figcaption>
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<p>When I heard that Sen. Tim Scott (R-SC) was pushing to get congressional funding for police body cameras after the deaths of <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/4/8/8368197/walter-scott-police-shooting">Walter Scott</a>, <a href="http://www.vox.com/cards/freddie-gray-baltimore-riots-police-violence">Freddie Gray </a>and countless other unarmed black men who&#8217;ve died at the hands of white cops, I was uplifted.</p>

<p>Scott is one of just two black lawmakers in the Senate. He&#8217;s from the Deep South, where he grew up as a poor kid in North Charleston, South Carolina, raised by a single mother. He understands personally the national dialogue on race and the growing frustration and outrage over police brutality and excessive use of force by officers across the country.</p>
<p><!-- ######## BEGIN SNIPPET ######## --></p><div data-analytics-category="article" data-analytics-action="link:related" class="chorus-snippet s-related"> <span class="s-related__title">Related</span> <!-- Add links here --><a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/10/6/6905253/cops-on-camera-these-powerful-video-clips-show-why-recording-the" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Why recording the police is so important</a><br><a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/9/17/6113045/police-worn-body-cameras-explained" target="_blank" rel="noopener">Why Baltimore&#8217;s mayor wants to equip her police department with body cameras</a><br><br><!-- End links --> </div><!-- ######## END SNIPPET ######## -->
<p>But he&rsquo;s also a Republican. Scott believes the federal government should not dictate local and state policy. So he is grappling with how to craft legislation that will improve the relationship between police and communities they are meant to protect, but without forcing local authorities to bend to the federal government.</p>

<p>I believe Scott is making an honest attempt to help solve an important problem in the black community and is moving in the right direction. But his political views have left him with a muddled policy proposal, at least so far. He met with reporters in his Capitol Hill office recently to talk about his push for body cameras, but reporters left with several big questions unanswered. Here are three he&rsquo;ll need to figure out if he truly wants to help solve this problem from his perch in the Senate.</p>
<div></div><h2 class="wp-block-heading">Scott&#039;s first big challenge: write a bill</h2>
<p>In the meeting with reporters, Scott said he&#8217;ll introduce a bill in the next three weeks to 90 days. But he says he&#8217;s still gathering information before he drafts anything. He spoke generally, saying he hopes the bill &#8220;addresses the concerns, provides the funding and avoids the pot holes and pitfalls.&#8221;</p>

<p>Scott took on police reform shortly after the death of Walter Scott last month. A video recorded by a bystander showed a North Charleston officer shoot the 50 year old black man eight times in the back as he fled. The incident happened in the senator&#8217;s hometown, which struck a nerve, and he supported a bill in his home state. Soon after he began agitating for a hearing in the Senate, which took place last week. Now he says he is getting ready to introduce a bill.</p>

<p>Scott has said repeatedly that policing is a local effort, not a federal effort, and that he doesn&rsquo;t want anyone under the impression that he supports federalizing local policing when he introduces his body camera legislation.</p>

<p>&#8220;I think local law enforcement is truly local law enforcement and when we start telling them what has to be a part of their uniform, so to speak, I think it&#8217;s dangerous territory from my perspective,&#8221; he said.</p>

<p>But he&#8217;s not saying going into much detail beyond that.<strong> </strong>There are any number of policies he could outline in this proposal. But so far, what those are is quite vague. He&#8217;s said he wants to make body cameras available, but he&#8217;s said little else.</p>

<p>&#8220;The legislation I&#8217;m hopeful of designing will first be a funding apparatus, second using a grant avenue and third, maybe have a very broad brush framework on being eligible for the funds,&#8221; he told me.</p>

<p>Until he shows what he&#8217;s got in terms of policy, it&#8217;s hard to know how effective it will be.</p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">He needs to put money on the line — or prove he can pay for it</h2>
<p>Scott&#8217;s next problem: how to pay for his legislation. He plans on asking for as low as several hundred million dollars to pay for his proposal, though he still hasn&rsquo;t pinned down a hard number. His starting point is already substantially higher than the $20 million <a href="http://www.justice.gov/opa/pr/justice-department-announces-20-million-funding-support-body-worn-camera-pilot-program">the Obama administration</a> will give to local police departments to help buy body cameras &mdash; the first phase of a three, year, $75 million program that will supply 50,000 devices.</p>

<p>Still, there&#8217;s reason to believe that Scott could push his proposal through a Republican-controlled Congress. There is already a vocal faction of Republicans who share his value of police reform. And the party is looking for ways to broaden their tent. Supporting popular reform, especially one pushed by a black senator, wouldn&#8217;t hurt.</p>

<p>But fellow Republicans will want to know how he intends to foot the bill for his project. So far, we just don&#8217;t know.</p>

<p>Jarrod Bruder, executive director of the South Carolina Sheriffs&#8217; Association, testified during Tuesday&rsquo;s Senate hearing on body cameras that &#8220;the primary issue preventing law enforcement agencies from fully embracing the use of body-worn cameras is the exorbitant cost.&#8221; And although 15 percent of sheriffs&#8217; offices in South Carolina have body cameras, he said it cost one county $600,000 for the initial purchase of body cameras for 250 deputies, and $600,000 each year in recurring expenses.</p>

<p>Scott will need significant funds to make this work. And he&#8217;ll have to figure out where to find them.</p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Will cops volunteer to wear body cameras?</h2>
<p>Scott has rallied behind a legislative effort in his home state of <a href="http://www.abcnews4.com/story/28809559/sen-tim-scott-backs-body-camera-legislation-as-a-greater-protection">South Carolina</a> to require all state and local police officers wear body cameras after the death of Walter Scott. But in his own national proposal that he&rsquo;s crafting, he says he doesn&#8217;t want to mandate body cameras for every police officer.</p>

<p>The disconnect between what he wants to happen &mdash; for cops to wear cameras &mdash; and how to make it happen, is one of the biggest unanswered questions of his push.</p>
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									</content>
			
					</entry>
			<entry>
			
			<author>
				<name>Rachel Huggins</name>
			</author>
			
			<title type="html"><![CDATA[When will the race debate in America end? Toni Morrison says it’s far from over.]]></title>
			<link rel="alternate" type="text/html" href="https://www.vox.com/2015/4/26/8497787/toni-morrison-race-criminal-justice" />
			<id>https://www.vox.com/2015/4/26/8497787/toni-morrison-race-criminal-justice</id>
			<updated>2019-03-04T18:45:32-05:00</updated>
			<published>2015-04-26T14:10:02-04:00</published>
			<category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Books" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Criminal Justice" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Culture" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Police Violence" /><category scheme="https://www.vox.com" term="Policy" />
							<summary type="html"><![CDATA[That uncomfortable, cringe-inducing conversation on race that everyone always talks about? Toni Morrison wants to have it &#8212; and isn&#8217;t pulling any punches. In an interview with the Telegraph&#8217;s Gaby Wood on Morrison&#8217;s new novel, God Help The Child, the Nobel Prize&#8211;winning author explained when we&#8217;ll know the conversation on race can come to an [&#8230;]]]></summary>
			
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<img alt="" data-caption="Toni Morrison speaks during an event at Lisner Auditorium at George Washington University on September 21, 2011, in Washington, DC. | Kris Connor/Getty Images" data-portal-copyright="Kris Connor/Getty Images" data-has-syndication-rights="1" src="https://platform.vox.com/wp-content/uploads/sites/2/chorus/uploads/chorus_asset/file/15346723/GettyImages-125919906.0.1535882024.jpg?quality=90&#038;strip=all&#038;crop=0,0,100,100" />
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	Toni Morrison speaks during an event at Lisner Auditorium at George Washington University on September 21, 2011, in Washington, DC. | Kris Connor/Getty Images	</figcaption>
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<p>That uncomfortable, cringe-inducing conversation on race that everyone always talks about? Toni Morrison wants to have it &mdash; and isn&#8217;t pulling any punches.</p>

<p>In an interview with the Telegraph&#8217;s <a href="http://www.telegraph.co.uk/culture/books/authorinterviews/11532385/Toni-Morrison-interview-on-racism-her-new-novel-and-Marlon-Brando.html">Gaby Wood</a> on Morrison&#8217;s new novel, <em>God Help The Child,</em> the Nobel Prize&ndash;winning author explained when we&#8217;ll know the conversation on race can come to an end.</p>

<p>&#8220;People keep saying, &#8216;We need to have a conversation about race,&rsquo;&#8221; she said. &#8220;This is the conversation. I want to see a cop shoot a white unarmed teenager in the back. And I want to see a white man convicted for raping a black woman. Then when you ask me, &#8216;Is it over?&rsquo; I will say yes.&#8221;</p>

<p>Morrison&#8217;s remarks reflect the frustration and growing furor over the highly publicized string of deaths of unarmed black men at the hands of white officers, from <a href="http://www.vox.com/cards/mike-brown-protests-ferguson-missouri/mike-brown-shooting-facts-details">Michael Brown in Ferguson, Missouri</a> to <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/12/3/7327745/eric-garner-grand-jury-decision">Eric Garner in New York City</a> to <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/4/21/8461087/freddie-gray-baltimore-police">Freddie Gray in Baltimore</a>.</p>
<h2 class="wp-block-heading">Toni Morrison was right: African Americans don&#039;t trust cops to dole out equal justice</h2>
<p>African Americans make up <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/8/21/6051043/how-many-people-killed-police-statistics-homicide-official-black">only 13 percent of the US population</a>, but are killed by police at disproportionately higher rates than other races. Data suggests police are 21 times more likely to <a href="http://www.vox.com/2014/10/11/6959797/police-shooting-statistics-black-white-men-killed-cops-officer">kill</a> black teens than white teens.</p>

<p>So Morrison&#8217;s dismal view isn&#8217;t at all surprising. In fact, it&#8217;s echoed throughout the black community. Take <a href="http://www.nytimes.com/2015/03/02/us/justice-department-report-to-fault-police-in-ferguson.html?_r=0">Ferguson</a>, for instance. The protests that broke out after 18-year-old Michael Brown was killed by police officer Darren Wilson last August didn&#8217;t occur in a vacuum. A <a href="http://www.vox.com/2015/3/4/8149337/doj-ferguson-report-police-racism">March Department of Justice report</a> showed the deep roots of residents&#8217; frustration: city officials balance their local budget by targeting low-income black residents with fines and court fees, and police disproportionately arrest and use force on black residents.</p>

<p>Morrison implied that she is waiting for the criminal justice system to treat white people as it does black people. She&#8217;s not alone in her distrust of the system.</p>

<p>According to Gallup <a href="http://www.gallup.com/poll/175088/gallup-review-black-white-attitudes-toward-police.aspx">poll data</a>, 37 percent of African Americans trust in police officers &#8220;a great deal,&#8221; compared with 59 percent of white Americans.</p>

<p>And according to a <a href="http://www.pewsocialtrends.org/2013/08/22/chapter-1-i-have-a-dream-50-years-later/#treatment-of-blacks-by-the-courts-police-seen-as-less-fair">2013 Pew Research Center survey</a>, 70 percent of black Americans believe they are treated less fairly than whites during encounters with police. Meanwhile, 37 percent of white people said they think black people are treated less fairly by police.</p>

<p>On Saturday, <a href="http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2015/04/25/baltimore-protests-freddie-gray/26354515/">yet another protest</a> &mdash; in yet another city &mdash; broke out over the death of Freddie Gray, a 25-year-old black man from Baltimore who died April 19 after suffering a fatal spinal cord injury while in police custody. Police have admitted they did not get Gray timely medical care when he asked for it. The protesters want justice. They want answers. And they want proof that this won&#8217;t happen again.</p>

<p>Until then, the conversation won&#8217;t stop.</p>
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