Black. Single. Mother.
Real Life Tales of Longing and Belonging
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By:
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Jamilah Lemieux
“Jamilah Lemieux is one of the most important feminist writers of the twenty-first century.”—Brittney Cooper
With her signature candid, humorous, and sometimes biting takes, Jamilah Lemieux suffers no fools while also courageously revealing the scars of her own parenting journey and search for self-acceptance in a world that hates “baby mamas.” With a particular verve and relatability—honed in her many years among Black Twitter’s most prominent voices—Lemieux centers the complex reality of Black single motherhood: uncertainty and fierceness alike.
Black. Single. Mother. combines riveting personal essays, infused with whip-smart cultural and historical analysis, with twenty-one intimate first-person testimonies from a spectrum of Black single mothers. A long-overdue offering in celebration of the American matriarch most often maligned, Black. Single. Mother. sets out to inspire a new cultural and community dialogue about this powerful figure as one profoundly deserving of love, support, and respect.
*Includes a downloadable PDF of the Reading List from the book
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I didn’t relate to much of the book, in that I have never felt ashamed for being a Black single mother. What this book did do for me was help me to better appreciate my village. It also made me appreciate conversations with my grandmothers about raising kids and giving your best, whether or not the children’s father did or not.
I’m grateful for the transparency of the women in this book and grateful that many of my elders supported me in becoming pregnant at 19 without being married to my kids’ father. I was able to make a sound decision and options were laid out for me. My partner was also supportive and super helpful during my pregnancy. I often tell people that he was the best person for me to have kids with because of how he cared for me. He was excited to be a dad, while I struggle with the idea of being able to care for another human.
Part III had the most relatable stories about how to navigate motherhood and the relationship with the father after breaking up.
I appreciate Jamila’s for putting this project together and allowing these women a space to share.
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