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Engage in the mind of Olivia Hill, with stories from the point of view of a black little girl in the sixties discovering her world to a white housewife living in the rust belt of America. Each story reveals another perspective and reality, like a day in the life of a daycare cook to a church lady dealing with her sinful thoughts. With rich characters and surprising revelations, each story reveals a little more about the human condition and how we live through it.
Molly sees dead people.She helps the living and the dead and their interactions. Haunting in your new family home? She'll make sure your ghost is ready to move on. Need to find grandpa's will to make sure his car doesn't end up in some greedy investor's hands? She'll talk to gramps and let him know you're getting by and making him proud.WeHelp is the anti-Molly. It's a gig economy app meant to find those who can engage with the dead, and has them handle it in the most hamfisted-and dangerous-ways possible, all for crap pay and zero benefits. WeHelp is disrupting the world of the dead, and Molly has to stop it.All the while, her keen new psychic boyfriend isn't what he seems, and her punk ghost of an ex boyfriend is back to show her that he's ready for what they couldn't have before. However, Molly can't be ready until she learns something about herself-do ghosts respect her because she's dangerous? Kind, emotional, fragile spooky girl Molly?This is part of the San Jenaro world of stories, which includes Blood Flow, #iHunt, and the previous Molly story, Reaching Out. However, it's a fully standalone story, and a perfect place to dive into this twisted mirror of our modern world.Walk with Molly into the labyrinth. There's nothing to be scared of. Well, there's lots to be scared off, but the ghosts feed off your fear.
Standing on the Cordova dock looking out at the ocean, I knew I was not in Kansas City anymore. As a black woman, I had rarely been past the invisible racial line of the Troost corridor in Kansas City. Going to a small, indigenous village in Alaska with my newly wedded Jewish husband was terrifying. Despite my fears, I decided to leave a past of abuse, racism, and poverty. But would my past make me stronger in this new land or silence me? Travel North Black Girl is an unlikely journey of finding one's power. It addresses the complexity of race, gender, generational trauma, and the powerful healing that the wilds of Alaska provide. Through humor, adventure, and painful reckoning, this memoir speaks to us all.
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