|
|
|||
|
||||
OverviewIn the wake of an AI collapse and global ecological unraveling, humanity stands at a crossroad. Across the fractured landscapes of New Orleans, Lagos, Oaxaca, and Seoul, resistance takes shape-not through weapons, but through memory, song, soil, and code. At the center is Reverend Elijah Noble-a Southern mystic steeped in ancestral wisdom- joined by a constellation of techno-mystics, outcasts, and survivors. Together, they begin rewiring not just the future, but the meaning of humanity itself. When ancient ritual converges with fractured algorithms, a new ""communion protocol"" emerges-one that rejects domination in favor of deep remembering. What if survival has never been about control, but about becoming kin again? Prophetic and polyphonic, We Were Seeds is a vision of reclamation that braids the mystical with the technological, the sacred with the subversive-inviting us to imagine a world rebuilt not by power, but by care. Full Product DetailsAuthor: Diane Ford Dessables , Victor Montague, III , Justin Keith Keith JonesPublisher: Gemstones in the Sun Imprint: Gemstones in the Sun Dimensions: Width: 21.60cm , Height: 0.70cm , Length: 27.90cm Weight: 0.340kg ISBN: 9798218805968Pages: 100 Publication Date: 23 February 2026 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Paperback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Available To Order We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately. Table of ContentsReviews""Finally-a story where code isn't numbers but living language. We Were Seeds made me want to build tech that remembers where it came from."" - Asha Karim, software developer and open-source activist ""This book reads like prophecy and prayer braided together. It's a reminder that spirituality isn't an escape from the world-it's how we help heal it."" - Marisol Vega, interfaith minister & meditation teacher ""What moved me most is how queer love and kinship aren't added on but rooted in the soil of the story itself. Zora and Samira's bond, Tariq's altered embodiment, Elijah's haunted tenderness-together they remind us that liberation is always queer at its core."" -Renée Thomas, poet and queer futurist ""As someone who spent years chasing optimization, We Were Seeds shook me awake. This is the future tech was meant to serve."" - Noah Wright, former Silicon Valley engineer ""I saw my own recovery journey in these pages-messy, miraculous, and deeply human. This book is medicine."" - Tanya Brooks, CODA recovery services advocate Author InformationDiane Ford Dessables is a storyteller, minister, and cultural worker whose life's calling unfolds at the meeting place of faith, justice, and healing. Her path turned irrevocably toward this work in 2009, during a visit to Haiti, when ancestral memory and present-day reality braided together in a way she could not ignore.Her lifelong commitment to voice and liberation is deeply personal-shaped in part by her early years navigating dyslexia and not learning to read or write until age twelve. That journey from silence to self-expression fuels her belief in the transformative power of story and the resilience of the human spirit. On Juneteenth 2019, she opened the Gemstones in the Sun blog-a gathering place for reflections on belief, shifting values, and shared resources among people of color in the United States. A year later, she founded Gemstones in the Sun Incorporated, a nonprofit that creates spaces for global communities of color to heal from the harms of modernity-cultural norms and the subtle ways it entangles us all.Her ministry and activism have spanned decades and continents-from grassroots campaigns in Virginia's Tidewater region to global anti-hunger initiatives through Bread for the World and vocational work for the 6,000 congregations of the United Church of Christ. She holds a Bachelor of Arts in Communicative and Performing Arts, with a concentration in Theatrical Directing from the University of the District of Columbia, as well as master's degrees in both Divinity and Communication (specializing in journalism) from Boston University. She weaves together performance, media, storytelling, religion, and society into her justice work. A native of the Washington, D.C. area, Diane is a bisexual woman, a member of the recovery community, and the joyful spouse of Djalòki Dessables of Haitian descent. Together they are parents to four adult children. She uses she/her pronouns. Victor Montague III is a self-taught artist, born and raised in the nation's capital, Washington, DC, (USA). Specializing in realism and figurative painting, he uses his work as a visual language to communicate stories rooted in culture, identity, and lived experience.Drawing inspiration from his surroundings and personal history, Victor Montague invites viewers to engage a literal yet emotionally resonant portrayal of culture-one that is both captivating and powerful. Through meticulous detail and expressive composition, his artwork creates space for reflection, conversation, and a deeper examination of the human condition. Justin Keith Jones is a designer, educator, and Art Director for We Were Seeds. His work is shaped by experience across private educational institutions, social services, and community-based settings, anchoring a creative practice rooted in culture, identity, and lived experience. He established a creative business spanning urban streetwear design, where visual language and social meaning intersect.Grounded in graduate training in psychology, Justin approaches design as a form of care-attentive to memory and trauma, creating spaces where diverse perspectives and people meet, and engaging the lived realities of retail markets. For We Were Seeds, he guided the project's visual language, translating themes of ancestral memory and collective healing into imagery that invites reflection and connection. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
||||