“Remember Me Now is more than words on paper. It’s a journey back to ourselves—back to the strength of our ancestors, back to reclaim the joy that was stolen, back to lament and show up today with our heads held high. A must-read for all Black women.”—Toni Collier, speaker, podcast host, and author of Brave Enough to Be Broken
“Faitth Brooks opens her deeply generous and candid book with an invitation for readers to allow their story to merge with hers at that very tender junctionof empathy and humanity. This book made me feel honored and delighted to have been a guest at her table. I left nourished and satisfied.”—Marcie Alvis Walker, creator of Black Coffee with White Friends
“Black women everywhere will be reminded that we are more than our struggles and are worthy of a life well lived.”—Danielle Coke, illustrator and activist
“Remember Me Now is for everyone who has felt unseen and unheard. It is a lampstand for the weary and a balm for the restless. It is the book we need now to encourage us on the journey of life. The words on these pages will lift every fatigued soul who has ever doubted themselves.”—Latasha Morrison, founder and president of Be the Bridge
“Faitth writes with a level of authenticity that will connect with your soul.”—Ekemini Uwan, public theologian and co-author of Truth’s Table: Black Women’s Musings on Life, Love, and Liberation
“For a man who has had to find courage in the loneliest and darkest moments of life, it’s safe to say that this book by Faitth Brooks felt like all the hugs I’ve needed every step of the way. Brooks gives us a necessary source of light, forged at the intersections of womanhood, blackness, audacity, and failure. Moving? Yes. A triumph? Yes.”—Danté Stewart, speaker and award-winning author of Shoutin’ in the Fire
“Remember Me Now is beautifully affirming and extremely necessary. As a Black woman, this is a book I needed, and the divine timing couldn’t have been better. This book reminds us that we are worthy, we have a purpose, and celebrating ourselves is a radical act of resistance.”—Lettie Gore, historian, racial-justice educator, and podcast host of History Shows Us
“One of the most prominent voices of her generation, Faitth Brooks offers words with power to uplift Black women and enlighten those with a different lived experience.”—Rachel Macy Stafford, New York Times bestselling author and certified special education teacher
“With Remember Me Now, Brooks teaches us that our freedom depends on our courage to tell the truth about ourselves, one another, and this world. This is the book that I will read alongside my daughter with grateful tears and renewed resolve.”—James Howard Hill, Jr., PhD, assistant professor of religious studies at the University of Oklahoma