What We Are Reading Today: Floating in a Most Peculiar Way by Louis Chude-Sokei

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Updated 05 February 2021
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What We Are Reading Today: Floating in a Most Peculiar Way by Louis Chude-Sokei

Louis Chude-Sokei has such a unique coming of age story that spans across several continents beginning in the short-lived African nation of Biafra and ending in Los Angeles.

“This is a story of a young Black man trying to find himself in a world where he never quite seems to belong,” said Ijeoma Oluo in a review for The New York Times.

“Too African for Jamaica, too Jamaican for America, too American for Nigeria, Chude-Sokei grows up grasping at these various identities in the hopes of finding a Blackness that fits him, as each of these realms places its own, often contradictory, expectations upon him,” said Oluo.

“I cringed with recognition as Chude-Sokei attempts and fails to escape American racism by embracing his African forebears’ prejudice against Black Americans. But Chude-Sokei resists editorializing,” added Oluo.

“There are no life lessons, no rationalizations of the bigotry and violence that exist in a diaspora so ravaged by white colonialism. We must look at the author’s story, see how messy it is, and try to figure out why alongside him,” the review said.


What We Are Reading Today: ‘Natural Habitats and Wildlife Gardening’ by Shaun Mccoshum

Updated 10 March 2026
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What We Are Reading Today: ‘Natural Habitats and Wildlife Gardening’ by Shaun Mccoshum

Native plants are essential for healthy ecosystems that support insects and animals, but vegetation alone does not provide the necessary resources for most creatures or their life cycles.

This book breaks down ecological processes that regulate habitats and explains how to recreate vibrant, gorgeous, natural habitats in your own backyard—ones that attract pollinating insects, birds, and other suburban wildlife while appealing to neighbors and friends.

It focuses on how to rebuild broken processes and covers a wealth of topics.