“Good Talk uses a masterful mix of pictures and words to speak on life’s most uncomfortable conversations.”—io9 “Mira Jacob just made me toss everything I thought was possible in a book-as-art-object into the garbage. Her new book changes. “Good Talk” by Mira Jacobs. Synopsis: “How brown is too brown?” “Can Indians be racist?” “What does real love between really different people look like?” Like many six-year-olds, Mira Jacob’s half-Jewish, half-Indian son, Z, has questions about everything. At first they are innocuous enough, but as tensions from the 2016. Good Talk by Mira Jacob. A bold, wry, and intimate graphic memoir about American identity, interracial families, and the realities that divide us, from the acclaimed author of The Sleepwalker’s Guide to Dancing. The book, Good Talk, spans from her childhood in New Mexico to her more recent arguments with in-laws who wanted to vote for Trump and who she felt weren’t listening to her concerns about his.
This graphic memoir is so vital and good that I finished all 349 pages in one sitting. I was enlightened as much as I was challenged by this Sunday’s selection, ‘Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations’ by Mira Jacob:
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Happy Easter and a belated Happy Passover to all of you who celebrate. I hope these holidays provide you some level of comfort in these scary times. I don’t remember exactly how this illustrated memoir got onto my radar, but I think it was either through Instagram or by flipping through a copy at the Strand (remember when we could do that?). Maybe both. Either way, I was interested in reading it without actually knowing what it was about, and once I was able to get my hands on a copy of a newly released paperback edition, it went to the top of my reading pile like:
‘Good Talk’ is visually interesting, relevant to our current political climate, and it packs a punch. The book opens with Jacob’s 6-year-old son, Z, obsessed with Michael Jackson. He wants to change his hair and skin color to emulate the King of Pop, which leads to a conversation between mother and son about race and cultural appropriation. Their discussion inspires Jacob to tell her story about how she formulated her answers to her son’s questions through her life experiences. We follow her story from growing up in the Southwest as a person of color and the daughter of Indian immigrants, to becoming a writer living in New York City, to the confusion and anguish sparked by the 2016 election. In one childhood scene, she wins an essay contest sponsored by a local organization and is invited to read her work at a luncheon, but is intentionally given the wrong address and nearly misses the event. As an adult, she is treated like the help while at a party thrown by her Jewish in-laws. After the election, her mixed-race son asks Jacob if his father will be afraid of him because he has brown skin. The most interesting part for me, though, was how she grappled with balancing her love for her family and her in-laws with her disagreement with their cultural and political views. Her Indian family, for example, equates beauty and success with having lighter skin, so they figured Jacob’s prospects of a good marriage were diminished due to her darker skin. Her in-laws, despite welcoming her into their family with love and open arms, nevertheless support the current president and wave off Jacob’s concerns and fears. As someone who also struggles with how to relate to parents and relatives with political beliefs different from my own, I was like:
Jacob’s illustration’s were also very interesting and unlike other graphic literature I’ve seen. She uses photographs of people or places overlaid by her drawings of herself and other characters. Most of the time, the characters stand side-by-side and speak facing the reader, as if they are not only making us participants in the story, but also challenging our own conceptions and behaviors about race directly. It’s brilliant, and as I was reading I was like:
You can see on the book’s cover where author Celeste Ng writes that this is ‘exactly the book America needs.’ I agree. Jacob’s exploration of her origins in order to formulate answers to her son’s questions is conducted with love, empathy and a genuine desire to understand herself and those she loves, as well as to be understood in turn. It’s an approach from which we can all benefit. This book is as inspiring as it is informative, and you should all read it.
How it begins:
Because this book is illustrated, I will describe the opening page to you. It is one panel that contains a photo of ‘Off The Wall’-era Michael Jackson in the background, with cut-out illustrations of Jacob and her son in the foreground.
A text box partially covers Jackson’s face. It reads:
The trouble began when my 6-year-old son, Z, became obsessed with Michael Jackson.
Dialogue bubbles illustrate an exchange between mother and son. The son begins:
What is “obsessed”?
Like, into.
Really, really into?
Yes.
I’m obsessed.
My rating:
‘Good Talk: A Memoir in Conversations’ by Mira Jacob was published by One World in 2019 and 2020. 349 pages. $20.
More things worth your time:
Read this: To get a taste of Jacob’s artistic and writing style, here’s a short story she did for The New York Times this weekend about the coronavirus called ‘We Left New York With Clothes, Our Cat and Three Bottles of Disinfectant.’
Hear this: My friend Brian has a new Spotify mix of funk and soul classics that you need to listen to. ‘Stop talking across the table, Clarence’ is intended for the spades games we’re all going to have once we can see each other again. I know I’ve said it before, but spades is the best card game of all time, and if you think you know how to play, come see Brian and me at the table.
Read these, too: Some authors whose books I’ve reviewed recently have new works out. Rebecca Makkai published in Chicago magazine a fascinating oral history to commemorate the 30th anniversary of the National AIDS Action for Healthcare protests in Chicago. And Hanif Abdurraqib has a piece in Gen about the notable musicians we’ve lost to Covid-19: ‘The Unique Sadness of Mourning the Musicians Who Helped Us Grieve.’
Watch this: Donna and I are using our time indoors to catch up on popular prestige TV programming. Our current binge watch is HBO’s ‘Succession.’ I know we are late to the party on this show, but it’s as great and intense a storytelling feat as everyone says. We love in particular the show’s musical score. Vanity Fair made a really interesting video with composer Nicholas Britell, who explains the themes that motivate his music and how it helps the show’s storytelling.
Next week you’ll get a review of ‘Celestial Bodies’ by Jokha Alharthi. Also in the queue are ‘A Fine Balance’ by Rohinton Mistry, ‘The Decameron’ by Giovanni Boccaccio and ‘S.P.Q.R.’ by Mary Beard, among others.
In case you missed it: Books on GIF #130 featured ‘Drive Your Plow Over the Bones of the Dead’ by Olga Tokarczuk.
Shoot me an email if there’s a bestseller, a classic or a forgotten gem you want reviewed.
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Thanks for reading, and thanks especially to Donna for editing this newsletter!
Until next time,
MPV
With GIFs from Giphy.com.
Good Talk Mira Jacob Review
Synopsis: “How brown is too brown?” “Can Indians be racist?” “What does real love between really different people look like?”
Like many six-year-olds, Mira Jacob’s half-Jewish, half-Indian son, Z, has questions about everything. At first they are innocuous enough, but as tensions from the 2016 election spread from the media into his own family, they become much, much more complicated. Trying to answer him honestly, Mira has to think back to where she’s gotten her own answers: her most formative conversations about race, color, sexuality, and, of course, love.
Written with humor and vulnerability, this deeply relatable graphic memoir is a love letter to the art of conversation—and to the hope that hovers in our most difficult questions.
Rating: 4.5
Trigger warnings: Mentions of systemic racism and sexism, Donald Trump’s election to the presidency
Review: I’m the first to admit that Bookstagram made me read this book. I saw it everywhere last fall, and I finally got my hands on a copy during the first few weeks of quarantine. I put off reading it because I genuinely don’t think of myself as a graphic-novel-person, but after staring at it for a few weeks, I picked it up; almost immediately, I regretted not reading it sooner. It’s an amazing memoir, and the medium really aids the story.
Mira Jacob is a first-generation American; her parents immigrated from India, but she grew up in the American West. She’s not that much older than I am, so many of the experiences that shaped her life, I also lived through. I really enjoyed the story structure here: Mira and her husband have a son, Z, who is asking his mom questions about life in 2015/2016, as we are barreling towards the Trump election; those questions prompt her to go back in her memories, and remember the conversations that made her the person she is today.
Mira doesn’t mince words or color over rough experiences — as a white woman, I found myself squirming at many of the memories she recalled for this book. However, I love being forced out of my comfort zone, and this book did so in such a poignant and funny way. Mira is a charming narrator, and she’s frank about the good and bad experiences of her life, including fighting with her husband and family over rough issues, and Z, our erstwhile questioner, is absolutely adorable.
At the heart of everything is the power of family and love — it’s an uplifting story, at it’s core — and I feel like I know her. I might even recognize her on the street if I am ever able to leave the District of Columbia, given the visual nature of her story. I also feel like I have a better grasp on the first-generation American experience (not in a Jeanine Crimmins way, just in a “wow, I had never considered that” way); so much of her life has been impacted by being visually “other” and in telling her story, she weaves a candid story about race in the United States that is so necessary.
Admittedly, reading a story that centered on the horror at what Donald Trump might do in the White House while sheltering-in-place in the midst of a global pandemic was a bit of a mindf*ck. When he was elected, I had the same dread in my heart that Mira did — for totally different reasons — but I couldn’t ever have imagined this outcome. Consider that my warning on this, though.
TL;DR: An amazing look at being 'other” in America, told through the lens of the 2016 election. Don’t let that it’s a graphic novel turn you off — trust me.
Good Talk By Mira Jacobs Publisher
If You Liked This, Try These:
Good Talk Mira Jacob Amazon
“Trick Mirror” by Jia Tolentino (Shannon’s review here!)
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