 that matters most in our discipline, Black Feminist Anthropology was published in 2001. It set a new standard with a three-color cover that contained the image changing woman by Pueblo artist Helen Harding, and there's a story behind that, the image that I can tell you later. We were fortunate to be reviewed by Choice Magazine, and this is part of their review. Quote, a refreshing and inspiring collection of nine articles and a superb introduction, each author brings personal experiences of racism, sexism, and other challenges to bear on what are without exception successful examples of what Seawright Meals called the sociological imagination, where biography, intellectual activity, and activism are presented as a seamless whole. This book succeeds in going beyond Meals vision and unparalleled ways, all levels and collections, end quote. In December 2012, sorry, December 2003, no, 2001, December 2001, I received word that Black Feminist Anthropology has been selected as an outstanding academic title by Choice Magazine, so I get to put like the gold seal on my book. And what it said is that this is done, so I went to Choice and said, so how is it that they make this selection? And here's what they write, every year in January issue, Choice publishes a list of outstanding academic titles that were reviewed during the previous calendar year. This prestigious list reflects the best and scholarly titles reviewed by Choice and brings with it an extraordinary...