“A display cake read JUNETEENTH! in red frosting, surrounded by red, white, and blue stars and fireworks. A flyer taped to the counter above it encouraged patrons to consider ordering a Juneteenth cake early: We all know about the Fourth of July! the flyer said. But why not start celebrating freedom a few weeks early and observe the anniversary of the Emancipation Proclamation! Say it with cake! One of the two young women behind the bakery counter was Black, but I could guess the bakery's owner wasn't. The neighborhood, the prices, the twee acoustic music drifting out of sleek speakers: I knew all of the song's words, but everything about the space said who it was for. My memories of celebrating Juneteenth in DC were my parents taking me to someone's backyard BBQ, eating banana pudding and peach cobbler and strawberry cake made with Jell-O mix; at not one of them had I seen a seventy-five-dollar bakery cake that could be carved into the shape of a designer handbag for an additional fee. The flyer's sales pitch--so much hanging on that We all know--was targeted not to the people who'd celebrated Juneteenth all along but to office managers who'd feel hectored into not missing a Black holiday or who just wanted an excuse for miscellaneous dessert.”
Quote by Danielle Evans
Work
The Office of Historical Corrections
Browse quotes and source details for this work. more
Author
You May Also Like
Source: Rez Ramblings: Living on the Pine Ridge as 21st Century as an "Injun"
Source: Blackmail and Bibingka
Source: Nowhere But Home
Source: Above the Bay of Angels
Source: Out to Lunch
Source: The Chocolatier
Source: Paris, My Sweet: A Year in the City of Light
Source: Paris, My Sweet: A Year in the City of Light
Source: Paris, My Sweet: A Year in the City of Light
Source: Brooklyn in Love: A Delicious Memoir of Food, Family, and Finding Yourself