c.2018, 37Ink
$23 ($32 Canada)
211 pages
So what do you think?
For sure, youโve got opinions. You know what you like and what you donโt like. You have ideas and choices, attractions, and things youโd just as soon avoid. And sometimes, as in โHeads of the Colored Peopleโ by Nafissa Thompson-Spires, you just donโt know what to think.
For weeks โ ever since he found a used paperback by James McCune Smith โ Kevan Peterson had been thinking about a project. He was an artist, knew a lot of artists, and he wanted to do a book based on Smithโs words. He thought about it when he spent time with his little daughter and again when he saw an online newsfeed, complete with โchalk outlines.โ But there was more to that storyโฆ
Lucinda Johnston hoped her daughter, Fatima, might make friends easier at the private school Lucinda paid for. There was one other Black girl at the academy, and Lucinda thought friendship might happen naturally, but that girl was a bully whose mother denied her awful misbehavior. In โBelles Lettres,โ the two women square off in writing, though money talks loud. In โThe Bodyโs Defenses Against Itself,โ thereโs proof that the girlsโ friendship wouldnโt have happen as their mothers had hoped. In โFatima, the Biloquist: A Transformation Story,โ youโll think you know why.
Jilly, on the other hand, couldnโt think of anything but herself.
In โSuicide, Watch,โ she couldnโt decide: posting suicidal hints didnโt get enough LIKEs on social media, so maybe it was time to step up her game. She didnโt want to be sick or anything โ not like that girl, Fatima, she knew in high school โ but she did want more attention. How she was going to get it, well, that was a good question.
And Alma? Alma always thought sheโd be a good mother. She was willing to go to great lengths to have a child, but in โWash Clean the Bones,โ worry could get the best of her โ and of her son.
You may not know what to think when you first start โHeads of the Colored People.โ This collection of short stories initially seems a bit odd, as life meets literature in its opening story and author Nafissa Thompson-Spires pays homage to Smithโs book from the mid-1800s. Indeed, her overall work here is similarly titled to his but the difference between the two is like earth and sky.
These stories glitter, every one of them.
Granted, now, some donโt seem to be much more than slice-of-life tales that stop for no apparent reason but that they were done. Fear not: they circle around, and you may meet characters again in a layered manner, like building a sandwich. Thatโll make you gasp, and put the book down a minute to catch your breath.
Even so, these stories arenโt for everybody. If you like your fiction tied up neat with a bow, take a pass on โHeads of the Colored People.โ If you enjoy tales that play with your head a little bit, though, itโs a book youโll think is perfect.

