Wash day diaries

Jamila Rowser

Book - 2022

"A graphic novel love letter to the beauty and resilience of Black women, their hair, and friendships"--

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Subjects
Genres
Graphic novels
Published
San Francisco : Chronicle Books [2022]
Language
English
Main Author
Jamila Rowser (writer)
Other Authors
Robyn (Cartoonist) Smith (artist), Bex Glendining (colourist), Kazimir Lee, 1986-
Physical Description
191 pages : color illustrations ; 24 cm
ISBN
9781797205458
Contents unavailable.
Review by Booklist Review

Wash Day Diaries started out as a successfully crowd-funded mini comic,and this release expands on the original with four additional short stories, giving readers a window into the lives of four best friends and each of their respective wash days. The stories are interconnected and happen within a small time frame, revealing glimpses into the lives of these four Black girls from different backgrounds and with different struggles and situations. Each short story has a different predominant color, representing the mood and the person it focuses on. Color is also used to flip back and forth between past and present. Besides being a window into the lives of these women, it's a window into the lives of young Black women, specifically, and all the work and care that goes into maintaining their hair. The multilayered stories reflect how hair is cultural and affects not just appearance but their work lives and interpersonal relationships. This inviting and illuminating slice-of-life comic shows how the friends, all in different stages of life, can support and show up for each other.

From Booklist, Copyright (c) American Library Association. Used with permission.
Review by Publisher's Weekly Review

With spare dialogue and lush renditions of self-care rituals, Rowser and Smith paint a loving and intimate portrait of city life for a group of young Black women. The ensemble includes Kimana, a singer who is avoiding a scarily persistent suitor, Malik; Nisha, a photographer torn between two guys and the freedom of her "hoe phase"; Davene, who is drawn in blue-and-purple hued panels to reflect a bout of depression; and Cookie, whose Dominican grandmother attempts to make amends for her past homophobia as her granddaughter does her hair. Each story centers a different friend in their clique and is painted in a different rich color palette. Smith's lithe character design and eye for detail pair nicely with Rowser's economic storytelling, and Rowser expertly utilizes the group text as a sort of Greek chorus. The arc culminates at Kimana's performance, where the women band together to stave off both an aggressive Malik and Davene's looming blues, their colorful personalities coming together in a rainbow. The motif of wash day-- as the women wash their own hair and others', go to the salon, and get braids--invites the reader into the rhythm of their lives, with welcome inclusivity of queer romance, as well as non romantic story lines. This subtle but heartwarming homage to friendship, feminism, and reconciliation sings. (June)

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