I Dream Library x LUSH North America

REST, READ, REPEAT.

A collection of works by Black storytellers in, and from, Vancouver, Canada.

Picture Books | Activity Books | Graphic Novels | Poetry | Short Stories | Anthologies | Novels | Memoirs | Plays | Exhibition Books | Gallery Publications |

Picture Books | Activity Books | Graphic Novels | Poetry | Short Stories | Anthologies | Novels | Memoirs | Plays | Exhibition Books | Gallery Publications |

Curated for the Sanctuary by LUSH North America

August 12, 2023 | THE BLACK BLOCK PARTY

Rest, Read, Repeat highlights a long and diverse history of Black thought from authors, illustrators, poets, playwrights, artists, and activists who were born and / or are living in Vancouver today.

- Aisha & Rakim

When considering what “sanctuary” means at the intersections of Black identity, šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl’e7énk Square, and artistic practice in Vancouver, we responded using local storytelling as a capsule for community reflection. Our curatorial assistant, Rakim, acknowledged that literary representation IS sanctuary. This collection, like this event, interrupts the stress and isolation of misrepresentation in Vancouver, and serves as a place of inspiration for Black creatives looking to story for inspiration, answers, and SANCTUARY.

THE GATHERING PLACE

šxʷƛ̓ənəq Xwtl’e7énk Square

KiDLiT & MiDDLE GRADE

Picture book | Activity Book | Graphic Novel

POETRY

How She Read

Chantal Gibson


Harrowings

Cecily Nicholson


I Am Still Your Negro

Dr. Valerie Mason-John


100 Days | A is for Acholi

Otoniya Juliane Okot Bitek


Dear Current Occupant

Chelene Knight


The Junta of Happenstance | Each One A Furnace

Tolu Oloruntoba


Word Problems

Ian Williams


Burning Sugar

Cicely Belle Blaine


Eat Salt | Gaze at the Ocean

Junie Désil


The Gospel of Breaking

JILLIAN CHRISTMAS


The Great Black North: Contemporary African Canadian Poetry

Editors: Dr. Valerie Mason-John | Kevan Anthony Cameron


SHORT STORIES

Dominoes at the Crossroads

Kaie Kellough


Bluesprint: Black British Columbian Literature and Orature

Editor: Wayde Compton

In the spring and summer of 1858, 600 Black families and individuals moved from San Francisco to the colonies that would eventually become British Columbia. The move was in part initiated by an invitation by the governor of the British colonies, James Douglas, who is commonly believed to have had African ancestry, a rumour he neither confirmed nor denied. Douglas was born in Demerara, British Guiana, which is now Guyana, in 1803. His father was a Scottish merchant with commercial interests in sugar plantations, his mother was a free woman of Barbadian-Creole ancestry. His appearance was such that he could "pass" for white.

From the time of the first arrivals, the population and history of BC's Black community has been always in flux. If there is a unifying characteristic of Black identity in BC, it is surely the talent for reinvention and for pioneering new versions of traditional identities that such conditions demand.

And in all this time, Black artists in BC created: poems, stories and lyrics. Some were written, others spoken. Bluesprint is a groundbreaking, first-time collection of this creative output, and includes the work of such individuals as: Rebecca Gibbs, Nora Hendrix (grandmother to Jimi), Austin Phillips, Rosemary Brown, Yvonne Brown, Hope Anderson, Lorena Gale, Mercedes Baines, David Nandi Odhiambo, and many others dealing with issues surrounding race, community, gender, and genre. From the writings of James Douglas, to the contemporary hip hop lyrics of the Rascalz, and including the work of poets, journalists, letter writers, biographers, fiction writers, and speech givers, Bluesprint is a comprehensive anthology of literature and orature by Black British Columbians.

- Description adapted from Bluesprint publisher Arsenal Pulp, and the BC Black History Awareness Society


NOVELS

Fiction | Epistolary Memoir | Memoir


The Island of Forgetting

Jasmine Sealy


I’ve Been Meaning to Tell You

David Chariandy


A Credit to Your Race

Truman Green

From the publisher: Anvil Press

Set in Surrey, B.C., circa 1960, A credit to your race is a story about innocent love awakening between a fifteen-year-old black porter's son and the white girl next door. The novel is a disturbing and convincing portrayal of how the full weight of racism and bigotry came to bear on a youthful interracial couple.

“If isolation is a key theme of black B.C. writing, Green’s protagonist Billy Robinson is the most fully-drawn expression.”

– author and social historian Wayde Compton


Invisible Boy

Harrison Mooney

Memoir | Transracial adoption | Christian Fundamentalism | Racism | Childhood


The Counting of Sins: A Love Story

Robert Joseph Green


Exhibition Book | Art Publications


Jan Wade: Soul Power

Text contributions: Jan Wade | Deanna Bowen | Wayde Compton | Daina Augaitis | Siobhan McCracken Nixon


Abbott & Cordova

Stan Douglas


Dissident 01 Art Activism Musings, Colonial Euphemisms & (inter)Cultural Parlances

Krystal Paraboo


Dissident 02 Art Activism Musings, Toward an Ethic of Collection and Dissemination

Abena Somiah | Feven Tesfay | Aisha Kiani | shaya ishaq

Image 1: Vancouver Black Library 2022 | image credit: Amirul Anirban, The Peak, SFU

Image 2: I Dream Library x VAG Young Activist Reading Room: small stories of big change, 2022 | image credit: Anita Bonnarens, Vancouver Art Gallery

Image 3: Shaya Ishaq: Library of Infinities, Galerie SAW Gallery, 2022


Moving the Center

Freedom Singer by Khari Wendell McClelland