Sunday, December 18, 2011

Tananarive Due hosts 2011 Best Books #Blacklitchat on Twitter

My Soul to Take

Join us tonight for our year end #blacklitchat.Tananarive Due is our special host. We will be sharing our best book picks for 2011 and chatting with her about her new novel, My Soul to Take. To get to the online event click here.

Tananarive Due is an American Book Award-winning, Essence best-selling author of Blood Colony, The Living Blood, The Good House,and Joplin's Ghost, and co-author of the NAACP Image Award-winning Tennyson Hardwick mystery series. She lives in the Atlanta area with her husband and co-author Steven Barnes.

more on My Soul to Take:

Essence bestselling and award-winning author Tananarive Due delivers a heart-stopping new novel continuing the story of descendants of an immortal line of people who are the only ones capable of saving the world.

Fana, an immortal with tremendous telepathic abilities, is locked in a battle of wills. Her fiancÉ is Michel. But Johnny Wright, a mortal who is in love with her, believes that if she doesn't stay away from Michel, they will become the Witnesses to the Apocalypse described in the Book of Revelation.

Fana and the Life Brothers are rushing to distribute their healing "Living Blood" throughout the world, hoping to eliminate most diseases before Fana is bound to marry Michel. Still, they cannot heal people faster than Michel can kill them. Due weaves a tangled web in this novel, including beloved characters from her bestselling Joplin's Ghost, in a war of good against evil, making My Soul to Take a chilling and thrilling experience.

Friday, November 4, 2011

NELSON GEORGE host November Blacklitchat

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Update: Chat Cancelled.

“There are few people who can put the past seventy years of urban reality into the perspective
of the most recent hip minute like Nelson George. The Plot Against Hip Hop is no exception.
Nelson George braids actual facts and fictional characters flawlessly into a time-tunneled walk
along various developments in this now-megabusiness called hip hop. For those that say they
love hip hop as well as the total legacy it evolved from, it bodes well for them to keep this very
close to their head, heart, and attention.” —Chuck D, Public Enemyimage
We are pleased to announce that Sunday, November 6, 2011 at 9pm EST  The Plot Against Hip Hop author, Nelson George will be our Special Host for #blacklitchat Tweet Chat on Twitter!!!!!!!!!! So all you fans of Hip Hop Culture and Crime Noir, lets have an online book chat with him.
Who is Nelson George?
Nelson George is one of the first writers to document hip hop culture and is the author of several award-winning books on the subject, including Hip Hop America and The Death of Rhythm & Blues; he also coauthored (with Simmons) Russell Simmons’s autobiography Life and Def. He directed Queen Latifah in the HBO film “Life Support”, and is an executive producer of VH1’s long-running Hip Hop Honors broadcast.
What is The Plot Against Hip Hop?
The Plot Against Hip Hop is a noir novel set in the world of hip hop culture. The stabbing murder of esteemed music critic Dwayne Robinson in a Soho office building is dismissed by the NYPD as a gang initiation. But his old friend, bodyguard/security expert D Hunter, suspects there’s much more to his death. An old cassette tape, the theft of a manuscript Robinson wasworking on, and some veiled threats suggest there are larger forces at work.
D Hunter’s investigation into his mentor’s murder leads into a parallel history of hip hop, a place where renegade government agents, behind-the-scenes power brokers, and paranoid journalists know a truth that only a few hard core fans suspect. This rewrite of hip hop history mixes real-life figures including Jay-Z, Kanye West, and Russell Simmons with characterspulled from the culture’s hidden world, as  Illuminati, FBI agents, and West Coast gangstas roam the hard streets D Hunter walks down.
D Hunter is a tough, black-clad product of crime-ridden Brownsville, Brooklyn, a man whose family has been devastated by violence and who has dedicated himself to protecting people in an age of insecurity. Hunter has his own secrets, his own vulnerabilities, which he fights to overcome as he becomes a reluctant private eye. After reading The Plot Against Hip Hop, you’ll never hear the music the same way.

What Others are Saying about Nelson George?
“Nelson George is one of my greatest influences as a writer . . . He inspired me in many ways,
and he continues to inspire with The Plot Against Hip Hop.” —Talib Kweli
“One of our coolest cultural critics has written a mystery page-turner about the underbelly of
hip hop, and it’s woven with signature whip-smart insights into music. Nelson George’s smooth
security-guard-turned-detective, a.k.a. D, scours a demimonde as glamorous as Chandler’s Los
Angeles. This plot has more twists and turns than a pole dancer, and D definitely needs an
encore—he’s destined to become a classic.” —Mary Karr, author of The Liars’ Club
What is BlackLit Chat?
It's a stream of tweets about books by Black[including Pan-African, African-American, Brit, Caribbean, Canadian Black, etc.] authors in real time during a specified time. Our time  for this chat is Sunday, October 17, 2010 from 7-8 PM EST. Remember it here via Facebook athttp://www.facebook.com/blacklitchat.
How does it Work? 3 Easy Steps
  1. Get a Twitter account, or login, or remember your Twitter Password.
  2. Join the chat by clicking this link.http://twebevent.com/blacklitchat
  3. Now login with your Twitter Password.
  4. To join the conversation on October 30, please follow #blacklitchat on Twitter for a conversation moderated by (@BernadetteDavis) and (me) @deegospel. And if you aren't already, follow @nelsongeorge

Sunday, October 9, 2011

Tayari Jones Hosts #Blacklitchat Anniversary

tayari_jones_chat

Happy Anniversary to #blacklitchat!!! We are pleased to announce that Sunday, October 30, 2011 at 9pm EST  Silver Sparrow author, Tayari Jones will be our Special Host for #blacklitchat Tweet Chat on Twitter!!!!!!!!!! So all you fans of Tayari, lets have an online book chat with her. We may have some surprise drop ins from past #blacklitchat co-hosts.

Tayari Jones

Her first novel, Leaving Atlanta, is a coming of age story set during the city's infamous child murders of 1979-81. Jones herself was in the fifth grade when thirty African American children were murdered from the neighborhoods near her home and school. When asked why she chose this subject matter for her first novel, she says, "This novel is my way of documenting a particular moment in history. It is a love letter to my generation and also an effort to remember my own childhood. To remind myself and my readers what it was like to been eleven and at the mercy of the world. And despite the obvious darkness of the time period, I also wanted to remember all that is sweet about girlhood, to recall all the moments that make a person smile and feel optimistic."

Leaving Atlanta received many awards and accolades including the Hurston/Wright Award for Debut Fiction. It was named "Novel of the Year" by Atlanta Magazine, "Best Southern Novel of the Year," by Creative Loafing Atlanta. The Atlanta Journal-Constitution and The Washington Post both listed it as one of the best of 2002. She has received fellowships from organizations including Illinois Arts Council, Bread Loaf Writers Conference, The Corporation of Yaddo, The MacDowell Colony, Arizona Commission on the Arts and Le Chateau de Lavigny.

Her second novel, The Untelling, published in 2005, is the story of a family struggling to overcome the aftermath of a fatal car accident. When asked why she chose to focus on a particular family in this work after the sprawling historical subject matter of Leaving Atlanta, Tayari Jones explains, "The Untelling is a novel about personal history and individual and familial myth-making. These personal stories are what come together to determine the story of a community, the unoffical history of a neighborhood, of a city, of a nation." Upon the publication of The Untelling, Essence magazine called Jones, "a writer to watch." The Atlanta Journal Constitution proclaims Jones to be "one of the best writers of her generation." In 2005, The Southern Regional council and the University of Georgia Libraries awarded The Untelling with the Lillian C. Smith Award for New Voices.

The Silver Girl, her highly anticipated third novel, is forthcoming from Algonquin Books. An excerpt has been published in Calaloo. Tayari Jones debuted the piece as a headline reader at the conference of the Associated Writers Conference in Atlanta.

Tayari Jones is a graduate of Spelman College, The University of Iowa, and Arizona State University. She has taught at Prairie View A&M University, East Tennessee State University, The University of Illinois and George Washington University. Currently, she is an Assistant Professor in the MFA program at Rutgers-Newark University. She was recently named as the 2008 Collins Fellow by the United States Artists Foundation. She will spend the 2011-12 academic year at Harvard University as a Radcliffe Institute Fellow, researching her fourth novel. http://www.tayarijones.com/books

    I’ve heard about Silver Sparrow, but don’t know what it’s about?

    With the opening line of Silver Sparrow, “My father, James Witherspoon is a bigamist,” Tayari Jones unveils a breathtaking story about a man’s deception, a family’s complicity, and the teenage girls caught in the middle.

    Set in a middle-class neighborhood in Atlanta in the 1980s, the novel revolves around James Witherspoon’s families– the public one and the secret one. When the daughters from each family meet and form a friendship, only one of them knows they are sisters It is a relationship destined to explode when secrets are revealed and illusions shattered. As Jones explores the backstories of her rich and flawed characters, she also reveals the joy, and the destruction, they brought to each other’s lives.

    At the heart of it all are the two girls whose lives are at stake, and like the best writers, Jones portrays the fragility of her characters with raw authenticity as they seek love, demand attention, and try to imagine themselves as women.

    Praise for SILVER SPARROW:

    “Tayari Jones is fast defining middle-class black Atlanta the way Cheever did Westchester…”
    The Village Voice

    "A love story... full of perverse wisdom and proud joy....Jones's skill for wry understatement never
    wavers."—O, The Oprah Magazine

    “Jones is a master and Silver Sparrow is a revelation, alive with meaning and hope.”
    —Jayne Anne Phillips, author of Lark and Termite

    Silver Sparrow is rich, substantive, meaningful. It is also, at turns, funny and sharp, haunting and heartbreaking.”—The Root (The Root )

    “Nakedly honest...dazzlingly charged” —Atlanta Journal Constitution (Atlanta Journal Constitution )

     

    What is BlackLit Chat?

    It's a stream of tweets about books by Black[including Pan-African, African-American, Brit, Caribbean, Canadian Black, etc.] authors in real time during a specified time. Our time  for this chat is Sunday, October 17, 2010 from 7-8 PM EST. Remember it here via Facebook at http://www.facebook.com/blacklitchat.

     How does it Work? 3 Easy Steps

    1. Get a Twitter account, or login, or remember your Twitter Password.
    2. Join the chat by clicking this link. http://twebevent.com/blacklitchat
    3. Now login with your Twitter Password.
    4. To join the conversation on October 30, please follow #blacklitchat on Twitter for a conversation moderated by me (@BernadetteDavis) and my co-moderator @deegospel. And if you aren't already, follow @tayari

    Friday, September 16, 2011


    FILM STARS GATHER AT OPENING NIGHT OF URBANWORLD FILM FESTIVAL 

     

    Nelson George, Chris Rock and Diane Paragas at Opening Night of the Urbanworld Film Festival

    (NEW YORK) September 16, 2011 -  The 15th Annual Urbanworld Film Festival presented by BET Networks kicked off last night in NYC with the Opening Night world premiere of Nelson George and Diane Paragas' documentary Brooklyn Boheme. Stars such as Chris Rock, Spike Lee, festival ambassadorMario Van Peebles, Maxwell, Giancarlo Esposito and John Boyega (who's filming a movie with Spike) came out in support of the film many describe as a "love letter to Brooklyn."

    "We're very excited to be premiering this film at Urbanworld," said George. "Hopefully, the exposure we're receiving at this festival will create opportunities for us to bring 'Brooklyn Boheme' to the rest of the world."

    Additional celebs/VIPs in attendance included BET's Stephen Hill, Basketball Wives' Meeka Claxton, radio personality Egypt Sherrod, culture critic Michaela Angela Davis, stylist/entrepreneur Marlo Hampton, actorHassan Johnson, director Qasim Basir and The Start of Dreams directors The Horne Brothers.

    Urbanworld continues through Sunday 9/18 with appearances by Curtis "50 Cent" JacksonLynn WhitfieldTyrese, Jamie Hector, Valerie Simpson, Sonia Sanchez, Tami Roman, Chad Coleman, Nashawn Kearse and more. Visit www.urbanworld.org for more information.

    Nelson George will be guest host of #blacklitchat in November.

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    Thursday, September 15, 2011

    Connie Briscoe Hosts September Blacklitchat This Weekend




    We are pleased to announce that Sunday, September  18, 2011 at 9pm EST  Money Can't Buy Love  author, Connie Briscoe will be our Guest Host for #blacklitchat Tweet Chat on Twitter!!!!!!!!!!  So all you fans of PG County & Sisters & Husbands  lets have an online book chat with the author .

    So Who's Connie Briscoe?





    CONNIE BRISCOE has been a full-time published author for more than ten years. Born with a hearing impairment, Connie never allowed that to stop her from pursuing her dreams…writing. Since she left the world of editing to become a writer, Connie has hit the New York Times, Chicago Tribune, Washington Post, Boston Globe, Boston Herald, USA Today, and Publishers Weekly bestseller lists.


      I’ve heard about Money Can't Buy Love, but don’t know what it’s about?






      Lenora Stone used to say if she didn't have bad luck, she wouldn't have any luck at all. At age thirty-eight, instead of socializing with Baltimore's A-list, she photographs them for Baltimore Scene, a glossy magazine filled with beautiful people who, unlike Lenora, never have to worry about car trouble and overdue bills. As much as she'd love to slam the door on her overbearing boss, quitting isn't an option. She's barely making her mortgage payments and, though her condo might not be a palace, it's hers. Lately even things with her boyfriend Gerald haven't been right. They've been together for three years but he can't seem to ask the one question she's been waiting for. But what Lenora doesn't know is that her luck is about to change...Just when she thinks things can't get worse, Lenora wins the jackpot in the Maryland lottery. In a heartbeat, all her dreams become possible. She quits her job and indulges her every desire-starting with a shiny, silver BMW and a million-dollar mansion. Gerald is finally ready to put a ring on her finger and the city's most exclusive women's group is dying for her to join, officially moving Lenora from behind the lens, into the limelight. But in Lenora's lavish new world, all that glitters definitely isn't gold. Her old friend's are concerned about her sudden changes, and Ray, a sexy, young landscaper Lenora covered for the magazine is looking for more than a purely professional relationship. 
      As her life starts to come together, the things Lenora holds dear begin to fall apart. Has her world really changed for the better, or does fortune come with a heavy price?

      What Others are Saying…

      Fans of Briscoe, frothy chick lit, and African American pop fiction will enjoy this as a quick summer read.“—Library Journal

      “One of the spiciest novels of the summer… A talented storyteller on matters of the heart, Briscoe taunts us with the convincing and complex character, Lenora Stone.“—Examiner.com



      "Known for her skill in developing realistic characters, Briscoe has outdone herself in her depiction of Lenora...Money Can't Buy Love is an excellent summer read..." (Philadelphia Inquirer )

      "Fans of Briscoe, frothy chick lit, and African American pop fiction will enjoy this as a quick summer read." (Library Journal )

      "It is an entertaining story that leaves you feeling pretty good about your cash-strapped existence." (The Atlanta Journal-Constitution 
      )
          

      I would love to participate, but I don't understand what #Blacklitchat is. Can you explain?
      It’s a stream of tweets about books by Black[including Pan-African, African-American, Brit, Caribbean, Canadian Black, etc.] authors in real time during a specified time. Our time  for this chat is Sunday, August 21  from 9-10PM EST.

      1. Get a Twitter account, or login, or remember your Twitter Password.
      2. Join the chat by clicking this link. http://bit.ly/blcklitchat
      3. Now login with your Twitter Password.


      or hangout here at http://twebevent.com/blacklitchat