
Title: How to Live Free in a Dangerous World
Subtitle: A Decolonial Memoir
Author: Shayla Lawson
Other Contributors: N/A
Subject: Race, Gender, Disability, Ehlers-Danlos Syndrome, Travel, Recovery, Drag Culture, Death, Poetry, Identity
Publisher: Tiny Reparations
Published: 2024
ISBN/DOI/EISBN: 978-0-5934-7258-3
[ID: A book cover. The background is a pale orange colour. In the centre, a large photograph of a person with brown skin standing in front a desert under a blue sky. They have short braided brown hair swept over their left eye, and have their arms crossed over their chest, with one hand resting on the side of their face. The title “How to Live Free in a Dangerous World” is around them in large orange writing that covers the length of the photo. The subtitle “A Decolonial Memoir” is to the right their head in very small white writing. The author’s name “Shayla Lawson” is below the title, at the bottom of the photograph, in smaller yellow writing. Black text at the bottom of the cover reads, under the author’s name, reads “author of ‘this is major’, a national book critics circle award finalist”. /end]
Content Warning:
- Racism
- Death
- Infidelity
- Domestic Abuse
- Medical Content
- Toxic Relationship
- Suicide
- Assisted Dying
Summary:
“Phenomenal…. A memoir that opens into the world, with brilliance, courage, and elegant prose…. This is a book to read, read again, and remember.”—Imani Perry, New York Times bestselling author of the National Book Award winner South to America
Poet and journalist Shayla Lawson follows their National Book Critics Circle finalist This Is Major with these daring and exquisitely crafted essays, where Lawson journeys across the globe, finds beauty in tumultuous times, and powerfully disrupts the constraints of race, gender, and disability.
With their signature prose, at turns bold, muscular, and luminous, Shayla Lawson travels the world to explore deeper meanings held within love, time, and the self.
Through encounters with a gorgeous gondolier in Venice, an ex-husband in the Netherlands, and a lost love on New Year’s Eve in Mexico City, Lawson’s travels bring unexpected wisdom about life in and out of love. They learn the strength of friendships and the dangers of beauty during a narrow escape in Egypt. They examine Blackness in post-dictatorship Zimbabwe, then take us on a secretive tour of Black freedom movements in Portugal.
Through a deeply insightful journey, Lawson leads readers from a castle in France to a hula hoop competition in Jamaica to a traditional theater in Tokyo to a Prince concert in Minnesota and, finally, to finding liberation on a beach in Bermuda, exploring each location—and their deepest emotions—to the fullest. In the end, they discover how the trials of marriage, grief, and missed connections can lead to self-transformation and unimagined new freedoms.
Notes:
There is a kindle edition.
Lawson is nonbinary and uses they/them pronouns.
Here is a link to their website.
Here is a link to a Kirkus review.
Archivist Comments:
I did a language class in college that had a module on travel writing. It’s so hard?? And to make an entire book out of it and poetry? What a feat!
I think this is one of the newest books that’s been suggested to the archive.

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