Autoren-Bilder

Shannon Gibney

Autor von Dream Country

8+ Werke 296 Mitglieder 7 Rezensionen

Werke von Shannon Gibney

Zugehörige Werke

Birthing Justice: Black Women, Pregnancy, and Childbirth (2015) — Mitwirkender — 29 Exemplare
Welcome Home: An Anthology on Love and Adoption (2017) — Mitwirkender — 25 Exemplare

Getagged

Wissenswertes

Gebräuchlichste Namensform
Gibney, Shannon
Geschlecht
female

Mitglieder

Rezensionen

"A birthday as a clerical error"

"The speculative is not conjecture for adoptees, but it is our 'real life'"
 
Gekennzeichnet
Moshepit20 | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 31, 2024 |
The author, an adoptee, explores how her life might have been different if she had been raised by her birth mother, whom she met as an adult. She also discovered as an adult that her birth father had died when she was six. To include him in the story, there are some speculative fiction aspects such as wormholes. The book bounces back and forth in time and perspective, and switches from first person to third person frequently, sometimes mid-paragraph. While I believe this to be intentional, it was one of the things that threw me out of the narrative. All in all, I found that this writing style just didn't appeal to me. I was intrigued by the premise, enough so that I finished the book, but it left me feeling unsatisfied.… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
foggidawn | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jan 29, 2024 |
An ambitiously authentic adoption story where fiction does the work of truth, and archives, correspondence, and health records provide the roots of fantasy.

When she was 19, Shannon Elaine Gibney met Erin Rebecca Powers via a letter from Child and Family Services of Michigan. Yet their existences had already been deeply and intimately interwoven. Shannon was adopted by middle-class White parents Jim and Susan Gibney soon after her birth in 1975, but her alcoholic White birth mother, Patricia Powers, had named her Erin. Narratively, time and space become impressively distorted as Gibney relays autobiographical accounts of Shannon and Erin that complicate her conceptions of self as a transracial adoptee, biracial Black woman, writer, and science-fiction fan. Erin is imagined at dinner tables with extended family whom Shannon would never know well, if it all, facing the racist familial microaggressions she can’t quite avoid in any timeline. Biographical elements are similarly reconfigured: A maternal genetic predisposition to cancer and discovering parts of her Black biological father and his family tree that had all but been erased help flesh out Shannon and Erin in fuller, more embodied ways. Gibney invokes poet Audre Lorde as a sort of third mother, a source of creative inspiration and guidance. As both Erin and Shannon proceed through the spiral wormhole that threads this text together, Gibney offers up the singularly essential connective tissue of a robust and personal body of work.

An innovative and captivating reflection on identity and self. (author’s note, further reading) (Speculative nonfiction. 14-adult)

-Kirkus Review
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
CDJLibrary | 2 weitere Rezensionen | Jun 10, 2023 |
This multi-racial story and poem has the unifying thread of we all come from the same stardust and from single cells, from there are stories are linked by migration stories - places and beings. Each migration story is unique but similar in the themes of coming from somewhere and someone. The vibrant illustrations reinforce the words and can help to demystify the story for younger children, adults can take in the artwork and enjoy the colors and talent.

I appreciated the authors did not shy away from talking about race in a multifold way, including talking about slavery and calling it out: "White people called my ancestors "slaves," and Native boarding schools: "I come from ... ancestors forced to learn English at boarding schools." Addressing it in children's books is how we grow our racial fluency and to face our realities.

I can see teachers or artists using this book as a jumping-off point for activities related to identity.

I'm looking forward to getting my hands on a bound paper copy of this book. I have a feeling the pages will pop with vibrancy.

Previewed an e-copy with NetGalley
… (mehr)
 
Gekennzeichnet
eo206 | Oct 11, 2022 |

Listen

Auszeichnungen

Dir gefällt vielleicht auch

Nahestehende Autoren

Sun Yung Shin Contributor
Lucille Clifton Contributor
Maria Elena Mahler Contributor
Sidney Clifton Contributor
Jami Nakamura Lin Contributor
Sarah Agaton Howes Contributor
Michelle Borok Contributor
Arfah Daud Contributor
Jennifer N Baker Contributor
Kari Smalkoski Contributor
Diana Le-Cabrera Contributor
Janet Lee-Ortiz Contributor
Elsa Valmadiano Contributor
Dania Rajendra Contributor
Taiyon J Coleman Contributor
Chue Moua Contributor
Marcie Rendon Contributor
Seema Reza Contributor
Soniah Kamal Contributor
Rona Fernandez Contributor
Eric Smith Contributor
Kelley Baker Contributor
Matthew Salesses Contributor
Mark Oshiro Contributor
JaeRan Kim Afterword
Lisa Nopachai Contributor
MeMe Collier Contributor
Jenny Heijun Wills Contributor
Meredith Ireland Contributor

Statistikseite

Werke
8
Auch von
4
Mitglieder
296
Beliebtheit
#79,168
Bewertung
½ 3.7
Rezensionen
7
ISBNs
30

Diagramme & Grafiken