Danielle Kay
daniellekay.bsky.social
Danielle Kay
@daniellekay.bsky.social
Some things I think about often: community care & mental health, justice, books & libraries, space, the way we tell our stories, equity, trees, music, rocks, the impact of Christian nationalism/evangelicalism, authenticity & sincerity, joy.
📚✨🌒🔭🌲🌳🍁🪴🎵🧠🏳️‍🌈
okay, but this mistake in the captions is funny
November 6, 2025 at 5:26 PM
October 28, 2025 at 6:55 PM
How cute is this little pepper from my mama's garden?
September 14, 2025 at 7:49 PM
Books I read/finished in July, August, and these first few days of September. On the left, those I read on my own. On the right, the ones I read out loud to my 5 y/o.

Eternally grateful for words, stories, books, & libraries in my life, and now in my daughter's.
September 4, 2025 at 3:11 PM
"We must search out all the pieces we weren't meant to find" keeps echoing in my head, from @mskellymhayes.bsky.social in Let This Radicalize You. It's quiet, simple, powerful, empowering. Any of us can do it, in any context, big pieces or little pieces. It's an anchor with a living rope.
July 9, 2025 at 1:37 PM
Reading Let This Radicalize You by @mskellymhayes.bsky.social & @prisonculture.bsky.social, fwd by @mayaschenwar.bsky.social.

Crucial reading for this moment.

"Let this radicalize you rather than lead you to despair."

"to believe that even if we don't make it, we are all still worth fighting for"
July 3, 2025 at 3:57 AM
Going to channel the unhelpful panic I'm feeling right now into something useful. Treadmill, shower, then read to figure out some actual useful things I can do.

Open to any recommendations—organizations, actions, books, anything. My actual job is important community work but I want to do more.
July 3, 2025 at 1:15 AM
My May & June books, heavy on the fiction and all over the map genre-wise. A mix of books I read aloud to my daughter, books I received as gifts, book club books, some that came highly recommended by friends, and some I picked out myself. 📚
July 2, 2025 at 3:37 AM
This is so powerful. From a speech titled "If There Is No Struggle, There Is No Progress," given in 1857 by Frederick Douglass in Canandaigua, NY.
June 28, 2025 at 1:46 PM
& also also it has a map! & an interesting one, at that! starting off strong here.

The book is The Last Murder at the End of the World by Stuart Turton.
June 23, 2025 at 2:18 AM
Okay & also this is one of the sweetest dedications I've read:
June 23, 2025 at 2:10 AM
Still trying to add good things to the world instead of just sharing all the awful, so my share today is the lovely page edges of the book I'm about to start reading.
June 23, 2025 at 2:04 AM
Picked these up today while browsing at one of our local bookstores. I've been following @chanda.bsky.social for a long time and am excited to dig into this soon! & I'm not familiar with Kaveh Akbar's poetry but it grabbed me immediately. Love what I find when I'm not sure what I'm looking for.
June 17, 2025 at 3:32 AM
alt text:
May 3, 2025 at 1:12 AM
And here's the screenshot from the original post with alt text:
May 3, 2025 at 1:11 AM
My April books were all over the place! I read TWW for a children's lit book club I'm in with some college friends, read the Milford out loud to my daughter, and the rest were just for me. The Hofstadter was published in 1963 and remains very relevant—I have some issues with it but highly recommend.
May 1, 2025 at 11:01 PM
Jason Stanley on the "mythic past":
May 1, 2025 at 2:36 PM
from Jason Stanley's 2018 book How Fascism Works:
May 1, 2025 at 2:27 PM
So many issues in the U.S. come back, at least in part, to this. The individualistic, cynical belief that someone else being lifted up means you will lose out.

It's almost never the case, and when it is, it's bc some have obscenely more than they need while others don't even have the bare minimum.
April 21, 2025 at 7:01 PM
Reading some more this morning, and I cannot get over how this is all still so timely more than 60 years later.
April 15, 2025 at 12:54 PM
I bet if you pull back the curtains they installed over it, he's got big old sharpie marks next to all the things he's done so far.
April 14, 2025 at 7:50 PM
This footnote on page 124 of Richard Hofstadter's Anti-Intellectualism in American Life (1963) is beyond frustrating.
April 14, 2025 at 11:42 AM
Ooh this is fun! The tall stack is my increasingly precarious up-next pile, and the short one is what I'm currently reading.

Happy so far w/ my current reads! Reading the Milford aloud to my daughter with hefty on-the-spot edits because she loved Greenglass House but this one is not for a 5 y/o 😅.
April 13, 2025 at 8:57 PM
It is indeed those EO and page numbers (I'll put the National Archives/Federal Register link in a comment). Listen – I am so careful not to get swept up in conspiracy theories, but this can't just be a coincidence, especially coming from anywhere near Stephen Miller. Just right in our faces.
April 12, 2025 at 4:25 PM
Finished In the Time of the Butterflies and started this Hofstadter this weekend. Julia Alvarez continues to awe me with her writing. The Hofstadter is from the early 1960s yet feels painfully timely 60+ years later. The Alvarez – which culminates in an event in the DR also in the 60s – does too. 🦋
April 7, 2025 at 3:39 PM