Celebrating the Words of African Women and Women of African Descent.

Category: Women of African Descent writers

Book Review and Reflection of Legacy: A Black Physician Reckons with Racism in Medicine by Uché Blackstock, MD

Reading Time: 4 minutes

Year of publication: 2025

Genre: Autobiography

Country: United States

Introduction

Legacy by Dr Uché Blackstock is a heartfelt and courageous memoir that explores her life, family, and community while highlighting the ongoing health inequities that disproportionately affect Black communities.

She pays loving homage to her mother, “the original Dr Blackstock,” and writes about her with so much tenderness, admiration, and appreciation. Her mother worked as a doctor, caring for her community, and passed the baton to her daughters, who also became doctors.

As an African woman living in England and now Scotland, I had many moments of recognition while reading this. I am often in spaces where I am the only Black woman. One particular light-bulb moment came when Dr Blackstock described:

“I often was the only Black person in the room. In such situations, I felt as if I were under a microscope, always hyperaware of how I spoke, the words I used, the way I dressed. I found my body would stiffen up as I walked into a patient’s room. I’d stand up straight, trying to project confidence, to prove myself. I didn’t know the term for what I was doing, but now I can see that it was what is known as ‘stereotype threat’—a psychological phenomenon in which an individual feels at risk of confirming a negative stereotype about a group they identify” (p. 101 – Kindle Edition).

Just how many of us do this without even realising it, and just how stressful it is on the psyche and the body to live and present oneself in this way?


Book Summary

This book is essential reading for anyone seeking to understand (or deepen their knowledge of) the health disparities that communities of colour, particularly Black communities, face in the United States. I would argue, however, that Black communities universally experience the issues identified in this book. Dr Blackstock does not shy away from the brutal truths: the disregard, the lack of care, and the heartbreaking maternal mortality rates among Black women. She also humanises every person she writes about in this book, and this is crucial: recognising the fear behind people’s eyes, instantly knowing where it stems from, and acting accordingly to support them.

In addition to her lived experience, those of people around her and those she came to care for in her community, Dr Blackstock also incorporated research into her book, including key historical facts that everyone should know – exposing how deeply rooted many preconceptions about Black people, and Black women in particular, are. She also highlights the often-erased contributions of Black people to medical advancements. For instance, I did not know about the HeLa cells until reading this. Dr Blackstock traces the structural and systemic issues that affect health: racism, exclusion, inequity in medical training, and the institutional culture of academic medicine.


Key Themes

1. Interlocking Systems of Oppression

Dr Blackstock goes deeper than surface-level explanations. She uncovers layers of interlocking systems that produce and reproduce health inequities.

She reflects on how people often have no choice but to use the ER as their primary source of care, where medical insurance is out of reach:

“I came to see that the woman who couldn’t take time off work to get her blood pressure medication wasn’t only suffering from high blood pressure, she was suffering from lack of workplace protections.
The young man who lost his life to gun violence clearly needed better educational and employment opportunities. The elderly gentleman who had his diabetes medication stolen at the homeless shelter would need safe, permanent housing before his health could ever begin to improve in meaningful ways.” (p. 111, Kindle Edition)

Here, she shows that health outcomes are not simply medical; they are social, political, and economic.

2. Medical Racism and Academic Medicine

She writes openly about her experiences in academic medicine, including being thwarted and eventually pushed out for advocating for true diversity and health equity. These sections are heartbreaking, especially her reflections on supporting Black students navigating hostile, racist, and exclusionary environments. I thought, though, that this was a great show of building one’s own table instead of waiting for a place at another ‘s table. She went on to create her own organisation to do the work she wanted to do correctly.


Recommendation

As a Black African woman living in the UK at the time of writing this review, so much of this book felt familiar. I recognised the burden of representation, the isolation, the resilience, and the ways racism shapes everyday encounters, especially in professional spaces.

Legacy is an essential read.


For Black women, it offers recognition, truth, and healing.
For everyone else, it offers education, accountability, and a clear look at the systems that must change.

If you work in health, community care, academia, or social justice, this book should be on your reading list.

About the Author

Dr Uché Blackstock is a physician, educator, and founder of Advancing Health Equity, an organisation dedicated to dismantling racism in healthcare. Her work focuses on reproductive justice, health equity, and advocating for communities most impacted by structural racism. Read more about her, her work and order her book HERE.

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Book Review and Reflection: We Are All Birds of Uganda by Hafsa Zayyan

Reading Time: 3 minutes

Year of Publication: 2021
Genre: Fiction – Contemporary, Historical, Multigenerational
Country: United Kingdom/Uganda (author of Nigerian–Pakistani heritage)

Buy Book Here


Introduction

We Are All Birds of Uganda is Hafsa Zayyan’s debut novel, and it explores themes of migration, belonging, race, identity, and love across two generations and races. Set between London and Uganda, it captures the intertwined experiences of an Indian-Ugandan family and their descendants, addressing questions of home, identity, belonging, colonialism and postcoloniality.

Through deeply personal and reflective storytelling, We Are All Birds of Uganda examines how histories of displacement and racism continue to shape contemporary lives. The novel is part historical fiction, part modern-day exploration of identity and belonging.


Summary

We Are All Birds of Uganda is a story within a story that traces the lives of two people. One of Sameer, a young, bright, and driven man living and working in London, who finds himself at a crossroads about his sense of identity and belonging in the UK and in his place of work. He accepts a promotion at work, but it would mean leaving the UK to work and live in Singapore. Before embarking on this journey, Sameer takes a sojourn to Uganda to learn more about the place where his family came from, before they were expelled by Idi Amin Dada in 1972.

There, his life takes an interesting turn. On his quest to learn about his family in Uganda, he received heartfelt letters from his grandfather to his predeceased wife, in which he detailed his life. His grandfather’s social and political conditioning at the time was so deep that he never even called the people of Uganda Ugandans; he called them “the Blacks.”

It was interesting, however, how his grandfather later forged a great friendship with one of “the Blacks,” close and important enough to entrust him with his estate once Idi Amin expelled Indian-Ugandans and more profoundly, Uganda was so close to his heart that when the time came to choose, he chose Ugandan citizenship over British citizenship. He loved Uganda with all his heart and saw no other place as home. Uganda, for him and his community, was a place of prosperity – still was for the families who remained or went back. Successful Indian families like Sameer’s lived well, and still did so when Sameer went back. Unfortunately, native Ugandans still battled with high levels of poverty even after independence from the British.

Having lost his first wife and remarried, Sameer’s grandfather was despondent, so he began writing letters to his beloved first wife, each beginning with “To my first love, my beloved.” These were then later given to Sameer, and through his re-reading of them, we learn about his family’s life in Uganda, their successful businesses, their eventual expulsion, and his miserable life in Europe.

At first, I found his words hard to read. The way he wrote about “the Blacks” showed his prejudice and his clear thinking of Black people as inferior to the British and Asians in Uganda, but this was a clear consequence of his own colonialism.

When Sameer visits his family’s former home—his grandfather’s house—he meets his grandfather’s friend’s family, who still live there. He is immediately struck by the beauty of the man’s granddaughter, Maryam. Sameer is taken by her instantly, although at first, she is suspicious of him.

Hafsa tackles various historical and contemporary themes in this novel. She captures the contrast between Uganda and the UK, including ongoing racial abuse that is not new. The novel also highlights privilege, prosperity, and the quality of life for families like Sameer’s.

I liked Sameer and Maryam’s love story. It was interesting how Sameer’s implicit bias was challenged through his affection for Maryam. I liked how Sameer confronted his family’s prejudices against marrying outside his culture and race.


Recommendation

I highly recommend We Are All Birds of Uganda to readers interested in stories about migration, race, love, and the search for belonging. It will resonate deeply with anyone navigating multiple identities or cultural heritages. The novel offers a sensitive portrayal of diaspora life and the impact of displacement.


About the Author

Hafsa Zayyan is a British author of Nigerian–Pakistani descent. She studied Law at the University of Cambridge and now works as a dispute resolution lawyer in London. We Are All Birds of Uganda (2021) is her debut novel and the winner of the #Merky Books New Writers’ Prize. Her writing explores race, migration, and identity through the lens of family and intergenerational connection.

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