The Columbus Dispatch

Black book clubs take it to the next level

- Iman Stevenson

‘‘I want people to think radically,’’ said Noname, the 28-year-old rapper, in a recent phone interview from her home in Los Angeles.

She is outspoken, especially on Twitter, about dismantlin­g patriarchy, white supremacy and capitalism, but over the last year she has also been opening people’s minds through a more analog medium.

It started in July 2019, when she posted a photo of ‘‘Jackson Rising: The Struggle for Economic Democracy and Black Self-determinat­ion in Jackson, Mississipp­i,’’ a collection of essays about the movement to develop cooperativ­e economic practices in the capital of America’s poorest state. Later, another Twitter user replied with a photo of the book and suggested that they become ‘‘pen pals and swap notes.’’

Thus began the Noname Book Club, a reading group focused on texts by authors of color (tagline: ‘‘reading material for the homies’’). Hers is one of many Black- and women-led book clubs people are turning to in the midst of a virus that has alienated people from their communitie­s and a continuing global conversati­on about anti-black racism.

What is essential to each of these groups — and why members find them appealing — has a lot to do with leaders creating a space free of the white gaze.

The Black book club has, over time, served as a space of critical study, leisure and fellowship. In the 19th century, free Black Americans in the North saw literary societies and the organized literary activities that they sponsored ‘‘as one way to arrest the attention of the public, assert their racial and American identities, and give voice to their belief in the promises of democracy,’’ Elizabeth Mchenry wrote in ‘‘Forgotten Readers: Recovering the Lost History of African American Literary Societies.’’

Mchenry also notes in her book that ‘‘not every member of African American literary societies wanted to be a writer or enjoyed unmediated relationsh­ip with texts.’’ Some members weren’t even literate, so they relied on others to share informatio­n.

At the end of the 20th century, the Black-led book club became a national phenomenon and a commercial success. Oprah’s Book Club, founded by Oprah Winfrey in 1996, introduced readers to Black authors including Toni Morrison and Pearl Cleage in the 1990s and early aughts. Winfrey helped bring Black literature to non-black consumers and created a blueprint for celebritie­s of all stripes to become literary tastemaker­s.

Since its founding in August 2019, Noname’s book club has grown to nearly 10,000 Patreon subscriber­s, who pay at least $1 a month for membership. Others follow her book recommenda­tions on Twitter and support the club by buying merchandis­e.

Though her mother, Desiree Sanders, owned a bookstore in Chicago, Noname did not necessaril­y inherit her bookish tendencies.

‘‘I wasn’t really interested in reading,’’ she said of her grade-school years.

And even now, ‘‘I’m pretty insecure about it. I’m just doing it now because I think it’s important, and I do love language and literature.’’

Her work expands to other forms of social activism, including sending literature to incarcerat­ed people. The future of her book club includes plans to start a grocery drive and provide cooked meals for the homeless in Los Angeles, where she lives.

‘‘The Free Reading Program,’’ which she plans to start once she reaches 10,000 subscriber­s, will focus on one essay a month and will be facilitate­d by organizers and educators, according to the book club’s Patreon page. The program is specifical­ly focused on political education, and will focus on themes like Marxism and feminism.

‘‘We read books, but under the umbrella that I am continuous­ly trying to expand different initiative­s through book club,’’ she said.

The vlogger known as Jouelzy, who founded the book club Smart Brown Girl, believes there is a privilege associated with selecting and interpreti­ng texts, so the space she has created is an attempt to remedy that.

‘‘We have a cohort of Black women graduate-level researcher­s who produce what we call syllabi that walk you through the readings we’re doing to make the books more accessible,’’ she said. Those materials include background on each author, a book overview, themes and motifs, reading tips, discussion questions and suggestion­s of similar books to read next.

Expanding the kinds of Black stories that are centered is what prompted K Bailey Obazee, 30, to start OKHA, a book club in London that she describes as ‘‘hella Black and hella gay.’’ (‘‘Okha’’ means ‘‘tale’’ in Edo, the language spoken in the state in Nigeria where she is from.)

Obazee grew tired of seeing the same Black authors promoted over and over again.

‘‘We kind of try and make sure that you are reading books, not just by the same people and not just by people who are well known,’’ she said.

 ?? [ERIK CARTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES] ?? The rapper Noname, who started a book club in 2019
[ERIK CARTER/THE NEW YORK TIMES] The rapper Noname, who started a book club in 2019

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