Skip to content
Responsive image
Vendor
Mohrbooks Literary Agency
Sebastian Ritscher
Categories

DON'T LET IT GET YOU DOWN

Savala Nolan Trepczynski

Essays on Race, Gender, And The Body

A powerful and provocative collection of essays that offers poignant reflections on living between society's most charged, politicized, and intractably polar spaces - between black and white, rich and poor, thin and fat.
Savala Trepczynski knows what it means to live in the in-between. Descended from a Black and Mexican father and a white mother, Trepczynski's light complexion has always contrasted with her kinky hair and broad nose to make her mixed-race identity obvious, for better and worse. At her mother's encouragement, she began her first diet at the age of three and has been painfully thin and truly fat, multiple times. She has experienced both the discomfort of poverty and the ease of wealth. It is these liminal spaces - of race, class, and body type - that the essays in Don't Let It Get You Down excavate, presenting a clear and nuanced understanding of our society's most intractable points of tension. The twelve essays that comprise this collection are rich with unforgettable anecdotes, and are as humorous and as full of Trepczynski's appetites as they are of anxieties. The result is lyrical and magnetic. In "On Dating White Guys While Me," Trepczynski realizes her early romantic pursuits of rich, preppy white guys weren't about preference, but about self-erasure. In "Don't Let it Get You Down," we traverse the cyclical richness and sorrow of being Black in America as Black children face police brutality, "large Black females" encounter stigma, and Black men carry the weight of other people's fear. In "Bad Education," we see how women learn to internalize rage and accept violence in order to survive. And in "To Wit and Also" we meet Filliss, Grace, and Peggy, the enslaved women owned by Trepczynski's white ancestors, reckoning with the knowledge that America's original sin lives intimately within our present stories. Over and over again, Trepczynski reminds us that our true identities are often most authentically lived not in the black and white, but in the grey of the in-between. Perfect for fans of Heavy by Kiese Laymon and Bad Feminist by Roxane Gay, Don't Let It Get You Down delivers an essential perspective on race, class, bodies, and gender in America today. Savala Nolan Trepczynski is a writer, speaker, and lawyer. She is Executive Director of the Thelton E. Henderson Center for Social Justice at University of California Berkeley School of Law, where she leads lectures and workshops for law students, scholars, and activists studying the intersections of race, gender, and law. She and her writing have been featured in Vogue, Time, NPR, Forbes, Huffington Post, Health, Shape, and more. She is a regular keynote speaker on social justice issues, including implicit bias, structural racism, understanding Whiteness, and the importance of social justice work for all lawyers. Prior to becoming a lawyer, Savala worked in the art world in New York City and Italy. She lives in the San Francisco Bay Area with her family.
Available products
Book

Published 2021-07-13 by Simon & Schuster

Comments

It takes temerity to tell this kind of truth, to be unbowed by one's own trepidation. Savala Trepczynski does so boldly, and this book will help so many Black women to get free.

ln her book of vulnerable yet voluble per-sonal essays... Nolan...shares her experiences of feeling "like a spy," an outsider in the relationships she formed with people whose privilege invests them with "layers of meaning even they didn't understand because fish never fully under- stand the water." She describes her writing as a new cartography- a body mapping of sorts... [she] writes with humor and power... [s]he's notably hon-est about navigating various contradictions in her life... Nolan's writing on identity and self-worth is captivating rom start to finish: her words will resonate long after the last page.

...revelatory and unsettling...

In this woven tapestry of stories and histories of race, gender, class, and the body, Savala Nolan Trepczynski gives readers a deeply personal insight into what it feels like to hold identities that are seen as 'other' in dominant culture. For those of us who feel like 'in-betweeners' this powerful collection of poetic essays offers a place to be seen and to be heard in the fullness of our beautiful complexities. In reading Savala's words as she travels to understand her experiences, and free herself from the parts that oppress, I found myself saying, 'Wow. Yes. Me too.'

UK: The Indigo Press

[This] insightful... mix of cultural criticism and thoughtful personal writing will be just right for fans of Roxane Gay. Read more...

Like the 12 essays in [this book] Savala Nolan is powerful and complex... Like Ta-Nehisi Coates' Between the World and Me... Nolan's essays speak to both young and old Americans about our country's pervasive history of racism.

This fierce and intelligent book is important not just for how it celebrates hard-won pride in one's identity, but also for how Trepczynski articulates the complicated - and too often overlooked - nature of personal and cultural in-betweenness. An eloquently provocative memoir in essays.

Nolan is writing into a long tradition, and its contemporary renaissance. From Du Bois's "The Souls of Black Folk" to slave narratives, the Black essay is rich with stories of otherness and duality. Writers like Clint Smith, Emily Bernard, Nishta J. Mehra, Ta-Nehisi Coates, Claudia Rankine, Mychal Denzel Smith and Robert Jones Jr. (among many others) bring the modern essay form to bear as much on how the experiences of Blackness differ as they do on how they cohere. This embrace of the heterogeneity of Black womanhood is part of this book's charm. Read more...

In these thrilling essays, built with one blazing, breathtaking sentence after another, Savala Nolan Trepczynski takes us from the personal to the political and back again as she explores her fascinating range of experiences as a Black American woman. Authoritative, honest, and often bitingly humorous, Don't Let It Get You Down is a book for our time and every time. It is not a book to read; it is a book to savor.

Savala Nolan Trepczynski deals a blow to the hollow - and very white - rhetoric of the body positivity movement with her essay collection, offering up her own stories of living in a body that are nuanced and warm, funny and painful.

The 12 essays are fiercely personal, confessional even, less concerned with the collective than her own origin story, which is both unique and reassuringly typical... If you read Nolan, you will probably like her. She is witty and gently self-deprecating, well positioned to wonder at the fault lines in our culture... She's a braver writer... [She] contains multitudes and is willing to ask herself questions she can't comfortably answer. That alone makes this slim book of essays worthy of our time.

Shondaland interviews Savala and says: "Not only is Don't Let It Get You Down an important read, but it is also a delightful one that shows just how multitalented and impressive the author is when taking on subjects that resonate inside of her but also in the bodies and minds of her readers as well." Read more...

In gorgeous prose and with profound clarity, Savala Nolan Trepczynski reckons with the interconnected oppressions, external and internalized, that have burdened her body: Anti-blackness, fat phobia, colonialism, and patriarchy. Don't Let it Get You Down is vital reading for all of us working to bust out of boxes, binaries, silences, and shame.