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Pretty
Pretty: A Memoir | KB Brookins
2 posts | 2 read | 3 to read
By a prize-winning, young Black trans writer of outsized talent, a fierce and disciplined memoir about queerness, masculinity, and race. Even as it shines light on the beauty and toxicity of Black masculinity from a transgender perspective—the tropes, the presumptions—Pretty is as much a powerful and tender love letter as it is a call for change. “I should be able to define myself, but I am not. Not by any governmental or cultural body,” Brookins writes. “Every day, I negotiate the space between who I am, how I’m perceived, and what I need to unlearn. People have assumed things about me, and I can’t change that. Every day, I am assumed to be a Black American man, though my ID says ‘female,’ and my heart says neither of the sort. What does it mean—to be a girl-turned-man when you’re something else entirely?” Informed by KB Brookins’s personal experiences growing up in Texas, those of other Black transgender masculine people, Black queer studies, and cultural criticism, Pretty is concerned with the marginalization suffered by a unique American constituency—whose condition is a world apart from that of cisgender, non-Black, and non-masculine people. Here is a memoir (a bildungsroman of sorts) about coming to terms with instantly and always being perceived as “other”
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Chelsea.Poole
Pretty: A Memoir | KB Brookins
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The audiobook, read by the author, of this memoir is the way to go; I loved hearing the details of Brookins‘ experiences as told with emotion and authenticity. An account of finding one‘s own way, regardless of the stories told by others about the way they SHOULD be. It‘s about gender and sexuality, especially in black culture. It‘s about finding the truth and living in it.

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Megabooks
Pretty: A Memoir | KB Brookins
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Great memoir from a Black transmasculine person. I love how they incorporated poetry in this exploration of the evolution of their understanding of their sexuality and gender identity.

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