The Risk It Takes to Bloom: On Life and Liberation

The Risk It Takes to Bloom: On Life and Liberation

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Author/Contributor(s): Willis, Raquel
Publisher: St. Martin's Griffin
Date: 06/09/2026
Binding: Paperback
Condition: NEW

One of TIME magazine's 2025 WOMEN OF THE YEAR and 100 MOST INFLUENTIAL PEOPLE

WINNER of the
LGBTQ+ Nonfiction, 2024 Best Book Awards

A passionate, powerful memoir by a trailblazing Black transgender activist, tracing her life of transformation and her work towards collective liberation.


In 2017, Raquel Willis stepped onto the stage at the National Women’s March just hours after the inauguration of Donald Trump. Mid-speech, her microphone was cut. The moment was brief, barely noticed by most — but for Willis, it crystallized a truth she had been circling her entire life: visibility is not the same as power, and inclusion is not the same as liberation.

The Risk It Takes to Bloom begins there and moves backward, tracing how a Black queer child from Augusta, Georgia, became the woman holding that microphone and what was required of her to keep speaking. Raised by devout Black Catholic parents, Willis grew up surrounded by love but isolated by silence, with little language for her gender or queerness. At the University of Georgia, she found her first glimpses of possibility: queer community, chosen family, romance, and early explorations of self. Then her father died suddenly, and grief cracked her life open. After college, Willis entered journalism and went back into hiding, believing living stealth was the price of survival. But as violence against trans women of color intensified and trans youth succumbed to suicide, she came to understand that silence was its own kind of harm. Her professional coming out became an act of resistance against a world that preferred people like her to stay silent and unseen.

Structured in seasons — rooting, budding, pruning, and blooming — this memoir is not a story of linear triumph, but of ongoing transformation. With lyrical precision and moral clarity, Willis examines what liberation truly demands: not certainty, but courage; not perfection, but truth; not simply survival, but the risk of a fully lived life.