Maroons: A Grievers Novel (Grievers Trilogy, Book 2)
Adrienne Maree Brown
(Author)
21,000+ Reviews
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Description
★ "brown's sensational second contribution to AK Press's Black Dawn series.... Equally thrilling and thought-provoking, this will put readers in mind of speculative greats like Octavia Butler and Samuel R. Delaney." --Publishers Weekly (starred review) A tale of survival, of moving beyond seemingly insurmountable devastation toward, if not hope itself, then the road to hope.
In the second installment of the Grievers Trilogy, adrienne maree brown brings to bear her background as an activist rooted in Detroit. The pandemic of Syndrome H-8 continues to ravage the city of Detroit and everyone in Dune's life. In Maroons, she must learn what community and connection mean in the lonely wake of a fatal virus. Emerging from grief to follow a subtle path of small pleasures through an abandoned urban landscape, she begins finding other unlikely survivors with little in common but the will to live. Together they begin to piece together the puzzle of their survival, and that of the city itself.
Product Details
Price
$18.00
$16.74
Publisher
AK Press
Publish Date
February 14, 2023
Pages
272
Dimensions
4.8 X 7.0 X 1.0 inches | 0.65 pounds
Language
English
Type
Paperback
EAN/UPC
9781849354806
BISAC Categories:
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Become an affiliateAbout the Author
adrienne maree brown is a writer rooted in Detroit who now lives in Durham, NC. She is a student of the works of Octavia E. Butler and Ursula K. Le Guin. Maroons is her second novel. Her previous books include Octavia's Brood, Emergent Strategy, Pleasure Activism, and We Will Not Cancel Us. Her visionary fiction has appeared in The Funambulist, Harvard Design Review, and Dark Mountain.
Reviews
"Brown's sensational second contribution to AK Press's Black Dawn series, which highlights works of radical speculative fiction ... Grief, loneliness, connection, and a little bit of magic all work together to create a powerful metaphor for grassroots activism. Equally thrilling and thought-provoking, this will put readers in mind of speculative greats like Octavia Butler and Samuel R. Delaney."
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"In Maroons: A Grievers Novella, adrienne maree brown travels the question of Rootedness. Like the Maroon communities of Africatown in Mobile, Alabama, or the Saramacca Tribe in Suriname, redefining home is one that Africans in the new world all face. As the world crumbles all around, we find Dune wondering, 'What does one do when everyone is gone and everything you love is abruptly taken away?' adrienne reminds us in this breathtaking novella that 'making home' is all about what and who we choose to hold on to."
--Queen Mother Jessica Norwood, founder of RUNWAY and Maroon Leader
"'You can find us in the heart of the gentrified new old town, the corner of Cass and Selden, between one gate and another.' adrienne maree brown took the time to really know our beloved, Black Detroit. She listened and she saw and that knowing and seeing unlocked worlds inside worlds. In all of her work adrienne stretches towards the matrix, the fractals and reflections, the ways our bodies and beings are in conversation with everything and everyone around us, all at once. The characters in Maroons have survived great grief and systemic failure. They carry forward ancestors and memory and magic. Dune and Dawud and all the Detroiters in Maroons are building connections and new worlds where 'every single thing is both good and as it should be.'"
--dream hampton, filmmaker and writer from Detroit
"If adrienne maree brown's Emergent Strategy and Pleasure Activism books had sci-fi novella niblings, they would be this Detroit trilogy. Maroons imaginatively superimposes Detroit's political landscape and grassroots movement lessons onto an alternate timeline where pockets of the city are reclaimed as liberated autonomous zones. In Maroons, amb weaves a story world that reminds us that when we give ourselves space to grieve, we create more capacity to build power and connection across dimensions."
--Ill Weaver, lyricist, performance artist, activist"brown has crafted a spell that descends on the reader in the future present. And when the mist clears, we are enveloped in the creative practices of refusal, escape, and sovereignty--of Black fugitivity--that allow us to live outside of and beyond dominant narratives, and into the possible of who we are, who we love, how we sustain community."--Alexis De Veaux, author of JesusDevil
--Publishers Weekly (starred review)
"In Maroons: A Grievers Novella, adrienne maree brown travels the question of Rootedness. Like the Maroon communities of Africatown in Mobile, Alabama, or the Saramacca Tribe in Suriname, redefining home is one that Africans in the new world all face. As the world crumbles all around, we find Dune wondering, 'What does one do when everyone is gone and everything you love is abruptly taken away?' adrienne reminds us in this breathtaking novella that 'making home' is all about what and who we choose to hold on to."
--Queen Mother Jessica Norwood, founder of RUNWAY and Maroon Leader
"'You can find us in the heart of the gentrified new old town, the corner of Cass and Selden, between one gate and another.' adrienne maree brown took the time to really know our beloved, Black Detroit. She listened and she saw and that knowing and seeing unlocked worlds inside worlds. In all of her work adrienne stretches towards the matrix, the fractals and reflections, the ways our bodies and beings are in conversation with everything and everyone around us, all at once. The characters in Maroons have survived great grief and systemic failure. They carry forward ancestors and memory and magic. Dune and Dawud and all the Detroiters in Maroons are building connections and new worlds where 'every single thing is both good and as it should be.'"
--dream hampton, filmmaker and writer from Detroit
"If adrienne maree brown's Emergent Strategy and Pleasure Activism books had sci-fi novella niblings, they would be this Detroit trilogy. Maroons imaginatively superimposes Detroit's political landscape and grassroots movement lessons onto an alternate timeline where pockets of the city are reclaimed as liberated autonomous zones. In Maroons, amb weaves a story world that reminds us that when we give ourselves space to grieve, we create more capacity to build power and connection across dimensions."
--Ill Weaver, lyricist, performance artist, activist"brown has crafted a spell that descends on the reader in the future present. And when the mist clears, we are enveloped in the creative practices of refusal, escape, and sovereignty--of Black fugitivity--that allow us to live outside of and beyond dominant narratives, and into the possible of who we are, who we love, how we sustain community."--Alexis De Veaux, author of JesusDevil